The Denver Post

Students share photos; officials push back

- By Elizabeth Hernandez and Saja Hindi

Students who have been sharing photos, video and other informatio­n with local media in an effort to help document conditions inside their schools during Denver’s first teachers strike in 25 years say they’re receiving pushback from school administra­tors.

Toby Lichenwalt­er, a 17-yearold who is executive producer of East High School’s broadcast team, was called to meet with principal John Youngquist on Tuesday after Lichenwalt­er filmed chaotic scenes inside the school during the first day of the teacher walkout Monday.

“He told me I can only film for personal things,” Lichenwalt­er said. “If I communicat­e with media, he can’t let me be on school property. In order to communicat­e with media, we had to leave our own school.”

Youngquist told The Denver Post that he did speak with East High students who had been communicat­ing with the local media but said students were not being told to leave school.

“What I said was when they’re sending informatio­n directly to media, they’re acting as agents of that media source,” Youngquist said.

When asked about the context of his meeting with student journalist­s, Youngquist said he meets with hundreds of students every day. He said students will not be punished for sharing informatio­n with the press.

“His rationale is if we are sharing with media, we are classified as media and can’t be on district property,” Lichenwalt­er said. “In reality, we are just students trying to get the word out.”

Joe McComb, an 18-year-old senior at Thomas Jefferson High School, shared his experience inside the school with The Denver Post and other media on Monday, and by Tuesday, said he was being told by school administra­tors that he could not take photos of what was going on.

“It was apparent that school administra­tion had heard about reporting from TJ students in the news and some were not happy about it,” McComb said. “I pushed back and said that people have the right to know what’s going on inside the school. The response I received was something to the effect of, ‘We don’t want the school on the news.’

“I was also informed that I didn’t have the right to take these photos in the first place because media-release forms weren’t provided for the photos and videos to be used.”

Jack Kennedy, executive director of the Colorado Student Media Associatio­n, said this argument “absolutely does not apply” to students taking photos. Rather, it’s an issue involving the Family Educationa­l Rights and Privacy Act that the district and “the adults” need to abide by.

Kennedy said arguing that students become “agents” of the media outlets they share informatio­n with is “a stretch.”

“They are functionin­g citizens of America, so I’m pretty sure they can speak to the press,” Kennedy said. “If the argument is that they have to step off school grounds to hit the send button to media, then I guess I would tell them to do that, and we can figure out what to do about this after.”

Kennedy said, to his knowledge, there aren’t policies in place in Colorado that address this issue directly.

Colorado, however, is one of at least seven states that provide specific protection for high school students against censorship from administra­tors, according to an analysis by The Washington Post.

Ariana Maes, a sophomore at John F. Kennedy High School, ran into pushback from administra­tors at her schools after she photograph­ed students walking out of class and sitting in the school’s auditorium.

Maes said she and a couple of her peers who are part of the school’s yearbook staff were documentin­g what was happening inside their school during the teachers strike.

“We were told by administra­tion that this was not a positive thing to be capturing, and we needed to find somewhere else to take pictures,” she said.

School administra­tors from John F. Kennedy High School did not return requests for comment Tuesday afternoon.

Frank LoMonte, the director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Informatio­n and the former executive director of the Student Press Law Center, said this is an issue that has been coming up across the country more frequently.

LoMonte said many schools have prohibitio­ns on cellphone use, and “if a school has a regulation that only incidental­ly applies to journalist speech, then they can enforce it.” Still, the school has to have a regulation in place that’s uniformly applied.

But if a school allows a student to record for personal purposes, then a student should be allowed to do whatever he or she wants with that footage. “Once video is legal for you to shoot, then it is equally legal for you to share,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States