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Delilah Matrese is only 10 but she’s very passionate about current events.

She made climate change the topic of a class project and “Last Week Tonight” host John Oliver is her hero.

So when she heard that students from 2,500 schools across the country were preparing to walk out of their classes to demand gun control, Delilah, who attends Hamilton Elementary in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, asked her parents if she could join in.

“She wasn’t able to do the last walkout, so she begged us to let her do this one,” her mother, Melissa Matrese, told CNN.

Matrese claims no other members of the faculty or students joined her daughter in the walkout. So her husband, Stephen, stepped in.

“My husband had to go to her school, sign her out, and stay with her,” Matrese said, adding that her daughter “didn’t care about being the only one because ‘Mommy, this is too important to be embarrassed.'”

Hamilton Elementary confirmed that Delilah is a student in the school but refused to comment on whether she was the only one to take part in the walkout.

“It’s not just me this time”

On the other hand, Justin Blackman, 16, was the only student in his school to walk out on March 14.

Today, about 350 of his fellow students at Wilson Preparatory Academy in Wilson, North Carolina joined him.

“I feel like nowadays teens have a voice, and I decided to express my voice with walking out and showing that I don’t stand for the injustice in our schools,” he told CNN. “The big difference from this walkout and the other walkout were numbers and with numbers we can still stand together and show that we won’t change.”

He shot a video of today’s walkout, showing crowds of students standing outside in front of the school. “It’s not just me this time,” he said.