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Poynter on the Record

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Candace Clarke
Poynter faculty quoted in print, broadcast, or online and stories about The Poynter Institute



Here's how we decided on our school security check
By Tom Marquardt
The Capital
Published: 10/22/2006

Excerpt:

When news broke in Pennsylvania that yet another deranged person had entered a school to take the lives of innocent students, parents wondered about the security of their children in Anne Arundel County schools.

We wondered, too, and our news instinct prompted us to try to find an answer. Could someone walk unchallenged into county schools?

On Oct. 12, a dozen reporters fanned out into the community shortly after school opened. That morning they checked the security at 56 county elementary, middle and high schools.

The reporters simply walked past warning signs asking visitors to sign in. Some were stopped by observant school employees. But at 24 schools reporters wandered freely for up to 20 minutes. Security tightened when a warning from the central office told schools what we were doing. ...

... The intent of such techniques is to expose problems in a harmless way so that corrective action can be taken before something bad happens. The fact that the schools announced a series of security measures shortly after our story leads me to believe that our schools are safer today than on the day we did our test.

Bill Mitchell of the Poynter Institute, a school for journalists, says, "It's a matter of balancing the public service you can do and the possible consequences. With someone unidentified, you always have the potential for something to go wrong."
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Posted by Candace Clarke 5:03 PM
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