August 20, 2008

The age-old debate resurfaces, this time with unlikely advocates. Read this, from Poynter’s Al Tompkins:

“A hundred college presidents signed a petition saying lawmakers should consider whether the drinking age should be 18, not 21. They say that it would help combat binge drinking.

“Note that they didn’t say Congress should lower the drinking age, just that we should have a big public kegger and debate it. OK, I made up the part about the kegger. ”

Here’s their logic, as reported by the Associated Press:

  • With one of the highest drinking age restrictions in the world, the United States encourages binge drinking by those under 21.
  • Adults can vote, sign contracts, and serve on juries, but not drink a beer.

This story is of likely interest to your school community and would warrant careful coverage. You could do a simple Q&A with a guidance counselor, school administrator or youth health expert. Interview students, teachers, administrators, the school resource officer and others for their views and experiences. Even better, talk to recent graduates who are now in college and discover their experiences with students getting around the drinking age.

It’s a debate worth covering.

Support high-integrity, independent journalism that serves democracy. Make a gift to Poynter today. The Poynter Institute is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, and your gift helps us make good journalism better.
Donate
Amanda Smith is an undergraduate student in the Journalism and Media Studies program at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg where she is the…
Amanda Smith

More News

Back to News