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Published byNoel Allen Modified over 9 years ago
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First Amendment Adapted from “Journalism Matters” Ch. 2
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“Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”
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In Summary: The First Amendment gives us our freedom of speech and freedom of the press.
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Government cannot censor what we say or print, unless it infringes on someone else’s rights.
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Different levels of courts: State Courts Supreme Court
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The Supreme Court has the ultimate ruling on all cases and the ability to make a ruling become law for all states.
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The Supreme Court has decided three cases directly relating to high school student expression.
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Tinker vs. Des Moines 1969
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Student punished for wearing a black armband to school in protest of the Vietnam War.
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What do you think happened?
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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the student, stating that a students free speech rights are protected in this case, as long as it does not disrupt the work of the school or rights of other students.
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Bethel School District vs Fraser 1986
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Student was punished for using vulgar references and innuendos during a school assembly.
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What do you think happened?
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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the school, stating that the school can determine what speech is inappropriate and allows schools to discipline the students.
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Hazelwood School District vs Kuhlmeir 1988
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The principal of the high school censored the stories in the school newspaper on teenage pregnancy and the effects of family divorce on children.
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What do you think happened?
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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the school.
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The Supreme Court stated that public school officials can censor student expression in school activities like newspaper, yearbook, school magazine or broadcast.
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Copyright Law
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Protects your original work from the use of others and you cannot use work done by someone else without permission from the creator.
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No copyrighted material may be reprinted or republished unless it is done under the “fair use” exception granted by law.
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Under the fair use law, part of a copyrighted work may be reproduced without permission if, the following apply:
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the use is for a non-profit, educational purpose
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it doesn’t affect the potential sales market of the original work
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it doesn’t reproduce a large portion of the work
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Ethics
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Guidelines for journalists to follow as they gather and report news.
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These guidelines: 1. Establish a sense of professionalism
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2. Establish credibility with readers and viewers (the public is confident it can believe what it reads and hears)
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3. Provides a uniform measure for dealing with news-gathering problems.
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Code of Ethics
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A journalist can be trusted to be accurate, honest, independent and to keep promises.
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Is respectful and sensitive to community standards and taste.
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Has a high regard for personal privacy Treats persons with courtesy and compassion
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(What does impartial mean?) A journalist is fair and impartial (What does impartial mean?)
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Is concerned about completeness and the context of facts and opinions used in stories.
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Acknowledges and corrects errors Listens to the questions and complaints from the public
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A journalist strives for excellence and considers the public interest in decision making.
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Plagiarism
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Taking someone else’s work and passing it off as your own.
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Plagiarism is prohibited and may be illegal if the source of the work is copyrighted.
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Facts taken from a source should be attributed to that source and verified. Paraphrasing published information is acceptable.
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