Student activists at the University of Missouri told the media, including two student photographers, that they were not welcome to photograph their "safe space."
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High school “Courage” award recognizes Southern California students confronting censorship, retaliation
High school journalists of the Matador, who have battled administrative censorship and the "indefinite" removal of their adviser, are the recipients of this year's Courage in Student Journalism Award.
SPLC model guidelines for college student media
Fighting censorship after Hazelwood
For those student publications that are affected by the HazelwoodSchool District v. Kuhlmeier decision, First Amendment protectionshave been significantly reduced.
Legal guide to Hazelwood and viewpoint suppression
A Colorado high school student newspaper wanted to publish two editorials — one in favor of a proposed administration plan to make study halls mandatory for underclassmen and one against the plan.
Guide to Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier
An SPLC White Paper on the 1988 Supreme Court Case that drastically affected students' First Amendment rights, Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier.
SPLC's Frank LoMonte talks student speech and school censorship on Education Talk Radio
Executive Director Frank LoMonte spoke out against schools' regulation of students' off-campus social media use on Education Talk Radio.
Wisconsin student government, angry at student newspaper’s debt, calls for adviser’s resignation
The UW-Oshkosh student newspaper, facing crippling debt, has the university administrators' support — but the student government has denounced the paper's leadership.
Letters show UVA, Va. governor urged Education Department to show UVA its findings of sex assault probe before releasing to public
UVA and state officials urged the U.S. Department of Education to treat the university "fairly" and give it due process before releasing the report to the public, documents obtained by the Washington Post show.
School records of settlements with parents are not completely protected under FERPA, Mass. high court rules
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that school districts must redact and then release family settlement documents, vacating a lower court ruling.