I wouldn't insist on the apology, but I would advise them not to abuse their 'free speech'Anonymous wrote:I've been supportive of the Beacon and critical of the principal starting the week off with the policy fight. That said, the student editor referring to her as "that woman" really puts me off. They do sound like entitled brats and if that were my child's quote I would insist they make an apology.
good try, it's not about race, it's about focus. If Ms Martin is black, I don't know it...my DC has not yet seen her. Bargeman is black though, he's been seen. He also enacted the unpopular hall sweeps, and it never made NPR. Its a different set of issues, not raceAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Beacon editorial was very well-written, but the editors did themselves no favors with their quotes in The Washington Post. "... this woman" !? Really? How about Ms. Martin, Principal Martin, or just plain old Martin or the principal?
Throughout the blog piece, their statements have a tone to them--dismissive, disrespectful--that is offputting. And that's from someone who applauds their stand against prior review.
In the eyes of these white students and their parents, Ms. Martin is just the hired help. God forbid she should ever think that she was hired to lead the school, and not do exactly what this crowd wants.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Beacon editorial was very well-written, but the editors did themselves no favors with their quotes in The Washington Post. "... this woman" !? Really? How about Ms. Martin, Principal Martin, or just plain old Martin or the principal?
Throughout the blog piece, their statements have a tone to them--dismissive, disrespectful--that is offputting. And that's from someone who applauds their stand against prior review.
I was also a bit put off by that, but I wonder if it reflects the tone of the negotiations. Based on Wemple's articles, Principal Martin was not available for one expected meeting and the students probably felt like they were jumping through a lot of unnecessary hoops. But, learning to watch your words around the press -- even if you are the press -- is a good lesson.
Anonymous wrote:The Beacon editorial was very well-written, but the editors did themselves no favors with their quotes in The Washington Post. "... this woman" !? Really? How about Ms. Martin, Principal Martin, or just plain old Martin or the principal?
Throughout the blog piece, their statements have a tone to them--dismissive, disrespectful--that is offputting. And that's from someone who applauds their stand against prior review.
Anonymous wrote:The Beacon editorial was very well-written, but the editors did themselves no favors with their quotes in The Washington Post. "... this woman" !? Really? How about Ms. Martin, Principal Martin, or just plain old Martin or the principal?
Throughout the blog piece, their statements have a tone to them--dismissive, disrespectful--that is offputting. And that's from someone who applauds their stand against prior review.
jsteele wrote:The latest about the Martin-Beacon negotiations from Erik Wemple:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2015/09/04/prior-review-is-dead-at-wilson-high-school/
Principal Martin has dropped her requirement that she review articles before publication.