Adviser Update Summer 2014 | Page 2

2A sUMMer 2014 WATCHDOG black Continued from page 1A Tracy Marcello, CJE, has a degree in multimedia journalism from Florida Atlantic University. She is the marketing and communication coordinator for Odell Brewing Company in Fort Collins, Colo., and previously worked as adviser of two high school publications — both of which were subject to prior review and prior restraint. Her students and their publications have been recognized by FSPA, CHSPA, JEA and NSPA, most recently with a Pacemaker Finalist nomination. She can be reached at marcello.tracy@ gmail.com. “Even when journalism is properly done, it’s going to ruffle some feathers,” he said. “That’s when journalism is done at its best.” Still, many principals don’t want to ruffle even one feather over a studentwritten story. In a survey conducted among 27 high school journalism advisers, 37 percent said that their principal either practiced prior review or prior restraint of the school’s publication. Annandale, Va. HS newspaper adviser Alan Weintraut vividly remembers the one instance in his 20-year teaching career when a principal confronted his staff, after they had written a story about an off-campus stabbing involving a student at the school. “He said, ‘From now on, I want to see the paper.’ And I said, ‘That’s not my policy and that’s not my students’ policy.’” Since then, Weintraut’s students have never been subject to prior review by an administrator, though he reads all of their stories before publication. “[Principals] can control the newspaper the day [they] go down to the sidelines and call plays,” he said. Neshaminy students challenge tradition E ditors of Neshaminy HS’s student newspaper, The Playwickian, can no longer ban the use of “Redskin” — the school’s mascot nickname — in editorials or letters to the editor. Neshaminy School Board members voted 8-1 June 26 on what the administration calls a compromise policy which allows student editors to remove the word from news stories, but not opinion pieces. Playwickian managing editor Jack Haines said he also objects to policy points that allow the principal to censor the paper for “any reasonable reason” and another that prevents the paper from endorsing a political candidate. “It essentially boils down to an administrator being able to censor for any reason he deems reasonable,” Haines said. Editors at the school located in Langhorn, Pa., voted last October to ban the use of the mascot’s name because they said “Redskin” is a racial slur and thus offensive to Native Americans. Following student editors’ ban of the controversial word, editorial boards of the Bucks County Courier Times and its sister papers, The Intelligencer and Burlington County Times, approved a similar policy. On June 18, the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office voted to cancel the NFL’s Washington Redskins trademarks, considering them “disparaging to Native Americans.” When a student wrote an opinion piece disagreeing with the editors’ policy, the newspaper staff agreed to publish it, but would only run the offending word as “R_______,” just as their professional counterparts do with other racially charged words. “Astonishingly, that wasn’t good enough for the school administration, which suggested not using the full word violated the complaining student’s First Amendment rights,” writes Ken Paulson, president of the First Amendment Center. “Does that mean all epithets are fair game? And what about a letter questioning the administration’s competence? Is that also a must-run?” In early June, students published their last edition of the school year without prior approval in a dispute over a letter written by the son of a school board member using the nickname. Instead of publishing the letter with the nickname as they were told to do by the principal, they printed an editor’s note explaining their position why they could not run the letter. The next week, the board introduced the revised policy and Principal Robert McGee told Playwickian adviser Tara Huber to change the passwords on the newspaper’s social media accounts and website. Instead, Huber decided to delete the Facebook and Twitter accounts, McGee said. Matt Schafer, the students’ attorney, said he thought the district violated the students’ First Amendment rights with the ultimatum, and also with a confiscation of a disputed number of the newspapers after they were printed. “Student editors are as free as other editors to report and editorialize the news,” he said. “We’re definitely not just going to sit back and let this happen,” co-editor-in-chief Gillian McGoldrick said after the meeting. “There are so many things that are wrong with this.” McGoldrick, Schafer and the other editors said they would have to discuss their next step now that the policy has passed. Ken Paulson’s commentary, “Young Americans have free-speech rights, too,” appears at www.firstamendmentcenter.org. Michael Macagnone of the Bucks County Courier Times (Pa.) did the original reporting on the school board vote. Content reprinted with his permission. sion statement charges us with creating,” McHale said. “I believe there is nowhere else in the school where this happens.” Advisers like McHale continue to fight for the rights of their students in an effort to breed responsible, ethical and fact-seeking journalists — the kind that aren’t afraid of the truth. And while some won’t go to the same lengths as McHale, most still promote controversial writing and all that it entails. Adviser’s role Arizona Daily Star editorial writer and columnist Sarah Gassen emphasized the role of advisers during a presentation at the Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI) at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University June 19. “ ]