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Better School Newspapers Part 1

Publishing in general is a tough nut to crack, and getting student reporters and photographers to come together and produce a readable periodical is even more challenging. Yet with a little ingenuity and some inexpensive technological help, you can oversee a terrific student newspaper. Here are some key topics that staff advisors of school newspapers can address in order to sharpen the skills of budding journalists.

Want more tips? See part 2 of this article for areas of focus that staff advisors of school newspapers can use to keep their publications running smoothly.

Newspapers have been an important way of informing the public for centuries

Is the next Woodward or Bernstein on your school newspaper's staff?

Scope of Coverage

Review Hsj.org’s resource Essential Local News Coverage at Your School with students. Analyze what the paper is currently covering, and compare this with what readers want and need. Have readers been surveyed, or have focus groups been conducted? If it is an electronic publication, has traffic to particular stories and pages been analyzed, and if so, what lessons have students learned about what readers want? Could coverage be expanded to cover events outside the walls of the school? Or is coverage too broad, such that it needs to be reined in?

Journalistic Ethics

In these days of the News of the World phone hacking scandal, students should know the difference between acceptable and unacceptable journalistic behavior. Check out Seven Ethical Dilemmas Student Journalists Face for ideas. Discuss hypothetical scenarios in class and have students come up with plans for dealing with these situations.

Social Media

Students may not think of blogging or posting to Facebook as journalism, but often it is. In this ever-growing form of media, how are the rules the same or different compared to those for traditional print publications? This resource list of Social Media Guidelines can help to frame class discussion.

Media and Information Literacy

Hsj.org defines news literacy as “the acquisition of 21st-century, critical-thinking skills for analyzing and judging the reliability of news and information, differentiating among facts, opinions and assertions in the media we consume, create and distribute. It can be taught most effectively in cross-curricular, inquiry-based formats at all grade levels. It is a necessary component for literacy in contemporary society.”

Are your student journalists good judges when it comes to the credibility of sources and gathered information? Use Six Principles Behind News Literacy in order to guide discussion.

 

Article by Jason Tomaszewski, EducationWorld Associate Editor
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