Warren Watson, director, announced today the creation of an annual fund-raising campaign to support J-Ideas, Ball State’s scholastic journalism and First Amendment institute.
Parties are invited to give $25 or more to the J-Ideas Foundation to support future activities of the program. Donations are tax deductible. <more>
J-Ideas Director Warren Watson blogs regularly for the Indianapolis Star. Here are his latest offerings:
Ignorance in Palin, Dowd free-speech remarks
The grace period is over from the November presidential election. Now, it's time to review the latest cases of ignorance about the First Amendment and how it fits into our lives. <more>
Student journalists scoop professional press
By Gerry Appel
In an era where student journalists are often criticized for poor decision-making, one student newspaper should receive praise after scooping its professional counterparts. <more>
Mile high with the First Amendment...
By Randy Swikle
We were north of the Mile High City near the Rocky Mountains. The principals were voluntarily descending—not from the tall peaks but from their position abutting the summit of school hierarchy. When they reached level ground, we could see each other more clearly. And clear sight leads to insight. <more >
Social networking pitfalls
Posted by Warren Watson
July 28, 2008
If you've been on another planet for the last three years, you missed the latest blossoming of the Internet -- Web sites such as Facebook and MySpace that link millions of users, serve as a source of news, information and just plain fun. Many believe these sites enrich public education.
Many young people can't get enough of a good thing, and sometimes they take things a bit far.
When I was a teenager, friends kept personal diaries where they expressed their deepest, sometimes darkest thoughts. They contained criticism of friends and teachers and even clones of evil Principal Rooney, the "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" villain.
Kids now use social networking sites for that venting. Problem is: Critical words don't stay in the top drawer of the dresser anymore. On Facebook and MySpace, words are there for all the world to see. Images too. Some even a little naughty.
The latest issue: an increasing number of college athletic coaches and others are monitoring the social networking habits of players, concerned that information critical of the school or team may be published, according to a July 28 article in USA Today. Some athletes have been punished.
At the same time, a high school in Lamar, Miss., enacted a policy forbidding public school students and teachers from contacting each other through social networking and text messaging.
The two developments illustrate the power of digital speech. They also indicate the lengths to which officials seek to censor free speech through policy.
In the end, it would be wiser to spend more effort educating students about the challenges and dangers of the Internet than to squash their efforts at learning how to express themselves.
Two Connecticut researchers have become synonymous with the problem of poor First Amendment awareness in the nation’s high schools.
Ken Dautrich and David Yalof, professors at the University of Connecticut and backed by the Knight Foundation, have logged thousands of miles nationwide in developing a series of studies and followups about the First Amendment. more