Waluga Parent-Teacher Organization
Teach your parents well.
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![]() THIS IS YOUR BRAIN…: This is a parent’s brain after reading the Newspacer. |
[February 18th, 2009]
Every once in a while kids must teach parents a lesson, and right now class is in session in Lake Oswego.
As originally reported last week by the Lake Oswego Review, the Waluga Junior High School Parent-Teacher Organization has its dander up about the Jan. 13 edition of the Newspacer, Lakeridge High School’s student newspaper.
The four-member Waluga PTO didn’t like that the Newspacer printed an opinion piece by senior Tyler Smith in which he interviewed students who use psychedelic drugs and wrote that he didn’t think psychedelics should be linked with other drugs. Now the PTO Roguishly wants changes that include ensuring there’s balance in the paper’s opinion pages whenever someone says anything controversial.
Mike Hiestand, legal consultant for the Virginia-based Student Press Law Center, calls this a good guideline if it’s “strictly for aspirational purposes.” But he says it isn’t easily enforced.
We’ll go further. This was an opinion piece. Who gets to decide which opinions need balance and which are OK run unopposed? And really, will one teenager’s voice in a student paper outweigh the constant chorus of public-service announcements, D.A.R.E. programs and parents shouting, “DON’T DO DRUGS!”?
The Waluga PTO also wants the paper, which has a faculty adviser, submitted to the principal or a faculty member for review before publication. As Hiestand says, “Prior review is bad journalism.”
We agree.
RECENT COMMENTS ON “Waluga Parent-Teacher Organization”
D.A.R.E. lost ALL credibility to speak on any issue when it continued to openly support President G.W. Bush after his drunk driving conviction was revealed.
B.Dillon: The point is the student opinion IS the balancing statement. Kids never hear positive stories about drug use. As Bill Hicks would say, if nothing good ever came from drugs, take all of you...
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