Showing posts with label Story Ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Story Ideas. Show all posts

Monday, April 09, 2007

Story idea: What's on your principal's playlist?

I'll confess -- I count my iPod among my most prized possessions. Four thousand songs of musical goodness that at the very least help define who I am. After all, you can learn a lot about a person from the music they listen to.

Those of you that have met me before, consider this: Does it change your view of me to know that I own just about every Pearl Jam album ever made? What if I told you that Five Iron Frenzy is my favorite band? Or that I enjoy listening to Underoath and Blindside? Or that Dave Matthews Band, John Coltrane and Tchaikovsky all share space on my iPod?

Therein lies a great story, as brought to us by the Poynter Institute after checking out this story on iTunes celebrity playlists:

What's on your principal's iPod? Or check the playlist of your head custodian or media specialist or Student Council president. Consider graphic treatment of those playlists to add visual interest to your report.

Anyone can report on what celebrities listen to. Only you cover your school.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

SPLC helps celebrate Sunshine Week; story ideas abound in public records

As we recover from the loss of House Bill 1307, it's about time we get back to looking at how we can continue to produce great journalism at our school newspapers.

The Student Press Law Center, one of the most ardent supporters of student press rights, recently helped to celebrate
Sunshine Week. Sponsored by the American Society of Newspaper Editors, "Sunshine Week is a national initiative to open a dialogue about the importance of open government and freedom of information."

Always the best legal resources around for student journalists, the SPLC has outdone itself with its revised Access to High School Records feature. It's a ready-made guide on how you can get your hands on -- and use -- some of the most common high school records that fall under freedom of information laws.

One example: How many students eat in your school's cafeteria everyday? Why not see how the school's kitchen stood up in its last health inspection? The records are right there for you to examine.

Don't know how to get a hold of those records? It's usually pretty simple, according to the SPLC:
An informal request for the relevant records should be enough to get the information you want. Just asking the appropriate school or government official politely should be all that it takes. However, if your informal request is not successful, you may be forced to invoke the power of your state’s open records law by making a formal request in writing.
If you have to make that formal request, the SPLC can help you with its FOI letter generator, which will cite the appropriate Washington law. Be careful how you use it, though; while it makes it clear that you have a right to the documents in question, it also has a pretty clear adversarial tone to it.

Take the time to check out the site. It's full of great ideas for enterprising reporters looking to do some good investigative journalism.