See the story, which mentions NBC reporter Jeff Rossen who conducted the Tuscan story, HERE:
School
shootings, especially the 2012 attack in Newtown, Conn., have prompted
not just a reassessment of safety measures, but also a rash of efforts
by news organizations in recent months to assess the effectiveness of
safety protocols. But these episodes have raised broader questions about
the ethical and practical implications of this type of reporting. In
some cases, things can go disturbingly wrong.
That’s
what happened in suburban St. Louis in January when an employee of the
news channel KSDK walked into Kirkwood High School unannounced and began
to roam the hallways. After several minutes, he aroused the suspicion
of the school’s office staff.
Soon,
the whole school was in lockdown. Police officers rushed to the scene,
teachers turned off the lights and crowded students into the corners of
their classrooms, and worried parents raced to check on their children.
Jen
Wilton, who has two sons at the school, said she was frightened when
one of them texted to tell her about the lockdown. The news station had
crossed the line, she said.
“They
certainly didn’t do me any service,” she said. “I have a few more gray
hairs because of it, and it terrified my kids and a lot of other kids.”
Critics
say these kinds of undercover efforts do not provide an accurate
portrait of school safety, and question whether they serve any public
good. Some journalists question whether the news organizations become
too much a part of the story, and whether it is dangerous for reporters
to wander into schools now that students and staff are often on
heightened alert.
“I
think that for a news organization to just go on this type of random
fishing expedition, there has to be a really good journalistic purpose,”
said Bob Steele, a professor of journalism ethics at DePauw University.
“There has to be some reason that you’re doing that, that you are
testing something in particular based on some sort of evidence other
than just, ‘school security is a problem in our country.’ ”
More HERE.
No comments:
Post a Comment