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Warren Watson
First Thoughts
March 14, 2009
Landmark First Amendment Research
with School Principals launched at Ball State
Ball State’s First Amendment institute has launched a landmark research project with 5,000 high school principals nationwide.
J-Ideas, a 5-year-old effort to support student journalism and First Amendment awareness, is reaching out to 5,000 principals to gauge their knowledge level and support for the First Amendment of the Constitution. The research coincides with Sunshine Week, a national effort to support Freedom of Information, an important principle of the First Amendment.
It’s all part of J-Ideas’ focused work with principals and administrators of the nation’s public high schools. Those activities includes a novel, online First Amendment course at Ball State especially designed for administrators; and a series of single-day workshops on the topic. J-Ideas, in conjunction with the McCormick Foundation and the Indiana High School Press Association, conducted such a workshop Friday, March 13, at Crown Point High School in Lake County. Thirty-two people participated.
Detailed surveys about the First Amendment are being mailed this week to 5,000 administrators covering all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Participants are being asked about their support of student free speech, online free speech, student journalism and social networking. They are also being asked about censorship.
It’s a huge undertaking. We hope to get results back in 2-to-3 weeks.
Last year, J-Ideas published results of a smaller study that showed that principals in 2007-08 were less likely to support student expression than in 2004, when a similar study was conducted.
This new study seeks to confirm and expand those results.
I’ll be on the road next week at the Columbia Scholastic Press Association convention in New York City to talk more about this study, believed to the largest of its kind ever.
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