Sunday, July 19, 2009

Writers receive national attention

A half dozen stories by Oaktown Teen Times writers have gone national.

The stories were picked up for the national edition of http://www.my.hsj.org/, a Web site run by the American Society of New Editors that hosts nearly 3,000 school newspapers.

"Based on their quality and appeal to a broad teen readership. ... these selections [were chosen and] represent stories that were the most interesting or moving of the week," according to ASNE officials in charge of the teen journalism site.

Oakland stories chosen for the national edition were: "From zoo critters to cool fashion: Senior Projects break ground, develop talents," by Ellissia Hill, MetWest High; "Principal returns to school after 10-day suspension," by Isabel Rodriguez-Vega and Eugene W. Lau, Skyline High "Oakland Tech grad Rickey Henderson selected for baseball hall of fame," by Hiroyuki Ito, Oakland Tech "Oakland teens shocked by police killings," by Gabrielle Carbaloc, Karina Gonzalez, Brisa Padilla and Dolores Quintara, Unity High School, "'Watchmen' works and not just for comic fans," by Bradley Izaguirre, Unity High School and "BART shooting reveals community mistrust of cops," by Javier Panzar, Skyline High School.

OTT editors recognized by school board


Oaktown Teen Times editors Beatrice Motamedi and Lisa Shafer received recognition from the Oakland Unified School District board at a June 10 meeting.

District spokesman Troy Flint said that he had been impressed with the quality of reporting by student journalists as they gather news about the district.

OTT students win NFPW writing awards

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF PRESS WOMEN -- Bay Area winners

OTT writer Ronald Johnson of Media Academy won first place in features writing for "Oakland develops 'Great Debaters,'" a story on the inaugural year of the Bay Area Urban Debate League.

Another first place for OTT work went to the editorial board of the Skyline Oracle. Their editorial, "Blocking the web limits free speech," was reprinted in the February issue of the OTT. Students contributing to the editorial were Javier Panzar, Diamond Broussard, Sam Lubin and Isabel Rodriguez-Vega.

The Oaktown Teen Times also picked up a pair of third place prizes from NFPW. Emely Srimoukda of Media Academy won third for her news story, "Define Google: learning tool or off-limits?" And Alenna So of Oakland High won third for her column "Sadness, sorrow facts of life in Darfur."

Congratulations to all!