Call & Times

Student journalist­s win censorship battle with school

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BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — Armed with a new Vermont law that protects student journalist­s, four high school editors have stood up to censorship and won, prompting their school to revamp its media policy.

The Burlington High School students had posted a story on the school newspaper website that they collective­ly wrote on a school employee facing unprofessi­onal conduct charges from the state. They had gotten a tip about the investigat­ion and filed a public records request, posting the story the night of Sept. 10.

The next morning, the principal asked the students’ adviser to take it down. The students quickly consulted with legal experts about what do to and wrote on the website that their article had been censored.

Days later, the principal said the students could repost the story since it had been picked up by local media. Then, Sept 15, the school did another about-face and said it would change its policy on media, based on the New Voices law.

“I think I’ve learned more in the past week than I have in my entire life. It’s been really incredible,” senior Halle Newman, 17, said.

The big lesson is she’s learned to stand up for herself and what she believes in and for their rights as a student press, she said. They’ve also witnessed how important journalism is to a community, she said, from the community reaction and support.

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