<p>This is just on a whim sort of basis. Do any of your guys's high schools have online magazines or newspapers? </p>
<p>I sort of want to start one but I'm in the process of getting the "why," part together. I just want to take an active role on enunciating literary integration. My school's kind of rigid and leaning slightly more towards science/math. I want the same field of opportunities for English heads too! LOL </p>
<p>Feel free to burst my bubble of excitement, too, please. This is seriously something that just popped in my head twenty minutes ago. I'm too excited to think rationally LOL.</p>
<p>Anything would help! Thanks! :)</p>
<p>My school has an online newspaper and an annual printed magazine, both of which are slowly tanking toward irrelevance and nonexistence (due mostly to lazy advisers). Our newspaper only reports news, and usually only boring, vague things, like spirit week or when a sports team wins something. The magazine is actually kind of interesting, filled with students’ creative writings as well as art.</p>
<p>Ah, thank you! (=
Hope your newspaper and magazine advisors get their butts back in shape. </p>
<p>I was thinking of making it a free-arts type of thing as well, with a “school-related” corner. Not sure if the latter would fly, but I think, or rather hope, showcasing student talents will be well-received.</p>
<p>My school has a monthly online and print paper as well as an annual art/lit magazine
[The</a> Lowell](<a href=“http://thelowell.org/]The”>http://thelowell.org/)</p>
<p>I can’t say much for how the writing part works so much, but it’s a collaboration between student editors/editors-in-chief and our teacher/advisers.</p>
<p>I’m the editor for the illustrations … so i’m a bit cut off from the writing sections ^^". The paper is student-funded through the ads we sell for the print editions. The lit mag is separate and it’s like a club? o - o i was a part of it before but lost interest</p>