It
was just 30 minutes. There and gone in an instant. But in a newsroom, so much
can happen in a half-hour.
On this Friday afternoon in March,
after two snow days and a delayed opening, the student-reporters for our school
newspaper hadn’t met since they’d sent out this week’s paper to the printer on
Tuesday night – a half-day ahead of schedule, in preparation for the snow. The
paper had been printed on Thursday, and we had somehow managed to get it in our
hands and deliver it during our shortened Friday homeroom. But now, at 2:15 on
a Friday, we had a half-hour to focus on the stories that lay ahead of us.
Two of my students were hard at work
on an in-depth inquiry into why so many schools in New Jersey and America are still
segregated by race. Another two students were planning interviews for a story about
the different positions parents take with regard to substance use by their
kids. Still another pair were working on a follow-up story to our coverage of
teens and e-cigarettes, with plans to interview adults who profit financially from
teen use of these devices.
Another student had written a
first-person essay on what this school paper means to her, to be published in a
new local magazine that had asked for contributions from us. And another
student was working on the latest in her podcast series on immigration.
And, of course, there were the
sports. Two of our sports editors were creating a giant NCAA Tournament bracket
on the staff whiteboard to keep track of the men’s basketball tourney throughout
March Madness season. And they were planning to preview the games in our paper,
along with a story on how the recent NCAA basketball scandal has impacted the
outlook fans have toward the annual college tournament.
Another student was taking photos,
some to accompany the magazine piece, and others to be used for publicity. Publicity
was in order because one of our staff members had just been named New Jersey
High School Journalist of the Year, with a nice scholarship to go along with the
honor.
Still another student was preparing
to cover the event taking place this Wednesday morning at high schools across
the nation. The nationwide organizing body is calling it a “walkout,” while
others are using different terms: remembrance, assembly, protest. Either way,
it’s been prompted by the shooting in Parkland, Fla., and is part of the powerful
student dialogue on gun control taking place around America. The student
covering this event will have just an hour to write her story, as it’s taking
place during our Wednesday morning deadline. She’ll follow that story by traveling
to Washington, D.C., 10 days later to cover the nationwide march for gun
control.
So, as I was saying, 30 minutes.
There’s a lot to do. A lot to talk about. A lot to plan. But my, that newsroom was
humming. You could feel it.
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