THIS IS ARCHIVED CONTENT FOR HISTORICAL REFERENCE ONLY

FIRST VOICES

watson

Little things mean a lot at the Newseum

Indianapolis Star column
by Warren Watson



J-Ideas Director Warren Watson blogs regularly for the Indianapolis Star. Here are his latest offerings:

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. <more>

-Campus free-speech thrives

-Ignoramcer in Palin, Dowd free-speech remarks

-Plainfield pays respect to First Amendment

-Banned Books Week

-Palin-tology

-Author creates First Amendment 'primer'

-New President must revive Constitution

-Traditional news misses Edwards escapade

-Protesters' rights fenced off

-Social networking pitfalls

-Bad year for traditional news gatherers

-Baseball and the First Amendment

-Principals and the First Amendment

-Remembering a crusader

-Photo ID law bad for voters

-Thoughts from the annual U.S. editors convention

-Need for print journalism remains

-Sunshine:now more than ever

-Mean-spirited fans

-Peter Jennings' legacy

-The First Amendment at the Alamo

-A New museum for news

-Author creates First Amendment 'primer'

-Unlikely First Amendment hero

-Harrison represented Hoosiers proudly

-Online course wraps for the fall

-Religious freedom for all

-Reading is FUN-damental

-Nothing negative

-Blogs grow in influence, but beware of anonymity

-Parent rides the bench after blog posting

-Student journalist's actions serves profession poorly

-Examining free speech online

-Remembering the courageous Elijah Parish Lovejoy

-First Amendment protects unpopular speech, too

Student journalists scoop professional press
Gerry
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>

-Principal wrong in pulling paper

Mile high with the First Amendment...
swikle
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

 
 
   
     
     
     
 
 
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
  Home > News > Blogs grow in influence, but beware of anonymity
     
 

Warren Watson
First Thoughts
Nov. 27, 2007

Reading is FUN-damental

Once again, a major national study has focused on the deficiencies of our sons and daughters when it comes to academic preparation and civic participation.

Less than two months ago, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation reported that for the third year in a row America’s high school students showed weak knowledge of and support for the First Amendment, the cornerstone of our Bill of Rights. The report strongly suggested that democracy is threatened when our schools fail to do an adequate job in preparing students to become citizens.

Now, our schools are getting dinged again, this time for failing to instill a love of reading in our youth.

This week, the National Endowment for the Arts, in providing new, original research while examining other data from previous surveys, said that Americans 18-to-24 are reading less and less, that reading comprehension scores have eroding, and that the declines have serious civic, social, cultural and economic implications.

Chairman Dana Gioia said that “teaching to the test,” as the saying goes among instructors preparing students for standardized tests, is not nurturing an appreciation of the written word.

Gioia said that students are spending less time with books and periodicals and more time watching TV, listening to music and using other media.

This scares me as an educator and as someone who cares about the civic health of young people.  Reading is a prerequisite for democratic life and institutions.

Our way of life is fueled by fresh and diverse ideas, ideas that create choices for voting and civic participation.  We have to read to make this work.

The study is a wakeup call for our schools.  We must sharpen our effort here and encourage our kids to read frequently and broadly.

We owe a lot to J.K. Rowling, whose Harry Potter series has jump-started many kids to begin to read for enjoyment.

But we must include non-fiction as well.  Too many schools overload what reading is available with tales of make-believe.  In fact, Project CIRCLE, a Maryland-based organization that monitors and reports on civic life and engagement, reports that only 12 percent of reading available in schools K-12 consists of non-fiction.

Sure, we all love a great James Patterson page-turner, but let’s not forget about real life – which sometimes can be a whole lot more interesting.

     
     

 

 

 

  Latest News

 
External Links

 
 

Review of Future of the First Amendment

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

_________________

SPLC Exec. Director talks to Ball State students about 'Digital Freedom'

IHSPA 2008 State Convention: The Convergention

Bloggers and Online News Users are Better Informed on First Amendment

Dautrich and Yalof Publish book on First Amendment

_________________

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  J-IDEAS is funded in part by the 
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation's
High School Initiative
and Ball State University.
 
J-IDEAS | Department of Journalism
Ball State University | Muncie, Ind. 47306
(765) 285-8923 | Terms of Service