Do you go to my school? We have to answer the same question for tonight's homework...
Anyway, I looked it up and the answer is that they sit up in "The Colored balcony" with Reverend Sykes.
The children, Scout and Jem, go to the courthouse to watch Tom Robinson's trial. They are accompanied by Reverend Sykes, their housekeeper Calpurnia, and other members of the African American community.
They go to the courthouse. But, the white section is completely full so Reverend Sykes, the the black preacher at Calpurnia's church invites them to the black balcony where they sit with him.
Most people in maycomb who came to the trial were there to see Tom Robinson or the mockingbird get killed except for atticus scout jem and the black members of the community who were sitting next to jem and scout on the balcony
Jem, Scott, and Dill go to the upper gallery of the courtroom. The Rev makes room for them to sit at the front of the balcony.
The most valuable gift to Jem and Scout was the pocket watch that Atticus gave Jem. It symbolized Atticus's trust in Jem's maturity and responsibility.
Because the children were watching the trial from the blacks balcony.
Dill and Reverend Sykes
jem's excuse was that scout was 9 years old and that she didn't understand so jem could stay at the trial
watch,
Scout, Jem, and Dill live with Aunt Alexandra, Atticus, and Calpurnia during the trial.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," characters who cry as a result of the Tom Robinson trial include Jem and Scout Finch. Jem is deeply affected by the unfairness and racism displayed in the trial, while Scout is saddened by the injustice and prejudice she witnesses in the courtroom.
The black Reverend and Dill are with Scout and Jem. They all sit in the first row of the balcony. When Atticus leaves the courtroom, the Reverend insists that Jem and Scout stand in respect for their father.