"Activating girls' voices" was the advertised title of the gathering, a Saturday morning at a high school journalism workshop in Indiana. It was our public "coming-out party" after months of groundwork by our student fellows, a chance for our most-wanted audience -- high school girls -- to see what Active Voice is all about. Optimistically,… Continue reading Building a community: the Active Voice listening tour rolls on
News
Student Press Law Center executive director gives interview about New Jersey’s New Voices law
New Jersey has a second shot at passing a New Voices bill, and New Jersey student journalists have been presenting their case in an impressive show of civic engagement. The Garden State Scholastic Press Association interviewed Frank LoMonte, the executive director of the Student Press Law Center, to get more information on the legislation. In… Continue reading Student Press Law Center executive director gives interview about New Jersey’s New Voices law
Georgia law against insulting public school officials in front of students ruled unconstitutional
Can you be arrested for insulting a school employee? No, says a 7-0 ruling from the Georgia Supreme Court, striking down a state statute that criminalized verbally abusing a school employee in the presence of a student.
A jolt to private colleges from the NLRB: Gagging employees violates federal labor law
A recent NLRB case brought by Northwestern University football players garnered attention on the sports pages, but its impact will be felt far more broadly and should improve journalists' access to employees at all private organizations, including colleges and universities.
Court of Appeals rules in favor of community college that removed nursing student over Facebook posts
What began as a series of venting social media posts has become a civil rights lawsuit that reached the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Censored Liberty University columnist steps down from position at student newspaper
An attempt by Liberty University administration to censor one of its newspaper’s student columnists backfired with the widespread republication of a column criticizing Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump across numerous national news outlets.
Louisiana court ruling eases journalists' access to education data sets — but are school lawyers paying attention?
Misapplying federal privacy law, education agencies have been withholding access to data when the data involves a small group of students, even where nothing about the data is matchable to a known individual. That should happen less frequently after a Louisiana court's favorable resolution of an unusual public-records lawsuit.
October 2016 Podcast: Meet the OG in the fight for student press freedom
Frank LoMonte: Hi, everybody, and welcome to another edition of the Student Press Law Center's monthly podcast. On the SPLC podcast we run down news and ideas about the law governing the rights of student journalists in high schools and colleges. The Student Press Law Center is an advocate for student First Amendment rights. We're… Continue reading October 2016 Podcast: Meet the OG in the fight for student press freedom
Reporting Out of the Mainstream
Alternative, online student media, like the Odyssey Online and the Tab, are becoming more popular on college campuses — sometimes causing rifts with traditional student papers.
October 2016 Podcast: Meet the OG in the fight for student press freedom
https://splc.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/1380_splcpodcastoctober2016o.mp3 Frank LoMonte: Hi, everybody, and welcome to another edition of the Student Press Law Center's monthly podcast. On the SPLC podcast we run down news and ideas about the law governing the rights of student journalists in high schools and colleges. The Student Press Law Center is an advocate for student First Amendment rights.… Continue reading October 2016 Podcast: Meet the OG in the fight for student press freedom