Submitted by Betsy Ahlersmeyer (not verified) on September 28, 2006 - 13:26.
First of all, student publications need to be advised by a highly qualified journalism teacher, preferably one that majored in journalism not English or soome other discipline. If the teacher is highly qualified then questionable material is discussed as a part of the course and as it arises during the publication process. In this way, student's First Amendment rights are protected and prior review and censorship does not have to be imposed by administrators.
First of all, student
Submitted by Betsy Ahlersmeyer (not verified) on September 28, 2006 - 13:26.
First of all, student publications need to be advised by a highly qualified journalism teacher, preferably one that majored in journalism not English or soome other discipline. If the teacher is highly qualified then questionable material is discussed as a part of the course and as it arises during the publication process. In this way, student's First Amendment rights are protected and prior review and censorship does not have to be imposed by administrators.