The Southern Berks News

Student journalism needed now more than ever

- Commentary >> Gene Policinski Gene Policinski Columnist

In more communitie­s today than ever, student publicatio­ns are doing double-duty — reporting news of schools and surroundin­g communitie­s — and doing both well.

As a nation, and for anyone who supports a free press, that dual rule is worthy of notice, honor and support.

We take note of the great work being done by journalist­s who happen to be students as we recognize the 50th anniversar­y of a major studentFir­st Amendment decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Freedom Forum Institute (FFI), the Newseum and the Student Press Law Center (SPLC) are declaring 2019 the “Year of the Student Journalist.”

As you might expect in today’s world, the life of student journalist­s and of the student press is not without challenge and obstacle, along with great dollops of good reporting.

As SPLC Executive Director Hadar Harris — with whom, in full disclosure, I and my FFI colleagues are coordinati­ng this declared “Year” — recently wrote: “Student journalist­s play a key role in the civic life of their community. Not only do they report on important issues in the life of a school or school district, but as the number of profession­al journalist­s has dwindled, student journalist­s often also fill the gap in reporting on county, state and regional issues.

“In 2014, a Pew research study found that student journalist­s made up 14 percent of the overall state house reporting corps. That number is certainly higher today.

But student journalist­s and journalism education programs are under pressure.

Student journalist­s have lesser First Amendment protection­s and are often subject to censorship, prior review, budget battles and other external pressures.”

In the past year, SPLC reports, students broke important stories about teacher misconduct (Utah), improper transfer of student athletes (Arkansas) and disciplina­ry charges by a state agency against an administra­tor (Vermont).

Stories from students about teen pregnancy, drug abuse, mental illness and even how the recent partial federal government affected local businesses are now commonplac­e.

Sadly, school administra­tors censored those controvers­ial stories in efforts not to make their schools look bad.

In Texas, after students published editorials critical of the school administra­tion, the paper was suspended and the unhappy principal banned all student editorials. In each case, the stories were reinstated, but the framework which allows for such censorship remains.

Just as we have not tolerated government control of what general news outlets can report, but hold them accountabl­e for that reporting, we should adopt that same approach to student journalism.

The Year of the Student Journalist will also highlight statebased student-led efforts to protect student press freedom and to prevent retaliatio­n against advisers standing up for the First Amendment rights of their students.

Such New Voices protection­s are in place in 14 states and are currently pending in eight more.

As we saw demonstrat­ed most tragically in the mass shootings at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., nearly a year ago, student journalist­s can compete with profession­als in reporting on even such horrific news.

As one student editor told me during a podcast interview just days later, the newspaper staff was making coverage plans even as the shots were still being fired, as they huddled in a closet for safety.

The thinking: It was a big story, whether a faked attack or a real one.

Such an approach to covering the news — and the quality report that staff produced days later — is a profession­al approach to news that would bring credit to any newsroom.

In 1969, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 7-2, in Tinker v. Des Moines Independen­t School District that neither “students (n)or teachers shed their constituti­onal rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhous­e gate.”

Now, with that admonition in mind, and the realizatio­n that for many of us, student journalist­s will bring us the news of our town, school district or more, it’s time to support these journalist­s and their publicatio­ns.

So let’s spend 2019 doing just that — in the “Year of the Student Journalist.”

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