follow journalism_news at http://twitter.com

Alphason TV Stands from Go Electrical

About Us Journalism books Email
 

The thrill of seeing your name in print

John Nurden, editor of the Trinity Mirror-owned Whitstable Times and Herne Bay Times, speaks out on the 'dos and don'ts' of naming the children pictured in his newspapers.


I was interested to read about the Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph battle to name schoolchildren in its First Class supplement.

I am having the very same fight here in Whitstable and Herne Bay.

Suddenly political correctness has gone mad. Head teachers tell me that if I print any of their pupils' full names in my papers they will stand the risk of being attacked by a paedophile.

Excuse me, but statistically most child sex attacks come from within the family.

I have yet to read a court report which blamed a photograph in a local paper for initiating an assault.

I am passionate about supporting our local community but the faceless bureaucrats who came up with this ludicrous blanket ban on naming children should be sent straight to detention.

I say "faceless bureaucrats" because the guidelines come from the Government's Department of Education. One of our head teachers showed me a circular sent out by Kent's child protection officers. It would make a great script for a TV sitcom if it wasn't so shocking.

The advice comes from the publicity division of the DfES and from child protection teams.

It states: "Providing the name and photograph of a pupil either in written, web-site or video format allows for the possibility that people outside the school might identify and then contact or attempt to speak to pupils directly."

It goes on: "When considering the use of photographs of children, avoid close-up pictures of individual children where possible and instead use general shots of classroom or group activities."

It gets better. "Decide whether there is a need for the school or pupils to be identified at all. If there is such a need, avoid captions that give the children's full names or include personal details such as e-mail addresses, home addresses or telephone numbers."

Now when did a newspaper last publish the home phone number of a student?

Read on...





E-mail this story to a friend. Your name:

Your friend's e-mail:


Jobsmake the next move in your journalism career Registernews and jobs updates direct to your desktop rss feed Photographylatest news for press, agency & freelancers Dailywhat's its circulation? who's the editor? Freelance indexSee our searchable list for freelance help Weeklywant to find a weekly? use our vast database Funniesquirky stories and unusual headlines Story ideasshort of story ideas? click here! Awardswon an award? let us know As featured on News Now Campaignsnewspapers fighting for their communities Contactsforget your Filofax! go straight to the horse's mouth Glossarysearch the database to help you out Website reviewsmore than 1,600 sites reviewed to save you time