果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

After popular adviser fired, Diablo Valley student reporters describe a journalism program in crisis

Diablo Valley College Adviser Fernando Gallo Fired

Staff of Diablo Valley College's student paper, The Inquirer, with former adviser Fernando Gallo, at the Northern California Journalism Association of Community Colleges conference at San Jose State on Nov. 16. (From left) Editor-in-chief Emma Hall, features editor Pavlina Markova, Eric Dionne, Fernando Gallo, and Aryana Hadjimohammadi. (Courtesy/ Emma Hall.)

Emma Hall sometimes feels like she鈥檚 running The Inquirer by herself.

, the student paper at Northern California鈥檚 Diablo Valley College, is technically offered by the college鈥檚 journalism department. But after following critical coverage of school administrators, it鈥檚 a class Hall 鈥 the paper鈥檚 sophomore editor-in-chief 鈥 says she鈥檚 effectively been left to instruct.

鈥淚 have to pretty much take lead on a lot of things that happen in running our newsroom,鈥 Hall said. There is a new faculty adviser, but they鈥檝e never led a college newsroom before. Hall says she鈥檚 who students go to for guidance. 

鈥淚鈥檝e been the one keeping The Inquirer afloat and running.鈥

Current and former Inquirer journalists confirmed Hall鈥檚 account of a publication beset by problems due to administrators exerting improper control over the 鈥溾 paper, while failing to provide basic course necessities 鈥 like an experienced adviser. 

More troubling, the students say, administrative neglect of The Inquirer is indicative of broader problems that could signal the end of the school鈥檚 entire journalism program.

Fired adviser stood by controversial coverage

Last spring, The Inquirer began reporting on found on campus, criticizing DVC for failing to inform students of the graffiti for days, which the paper argued 鈥溾 and posed a threat to student safety. 

DVC President Susan Lamb defended the administrative response and called the newspaper鈥檚 reporting 鈥.鈥

鈥淭he program is dying and nothing is being done.鈥

The Inquirer鈥檚 continued coverage of the administrative response to the graffiti led to controversy, rankling several faculty members who then in letters to the editor. Hall says one of those authors confronted The Inquirer鈥檚 then-adviser Fernando Gallo in the newsroom, resulting in a human resources complaint.

But Gallo, an alumnus of the , stood by the students鈥 coverage. Then, just 11 days before the start of the Fall semester, and despite having been promised an overload of classes to teach, Gallo was told his services were no longer needed.

The Inquirer has , with reporters saying the administrative explanation for Gallo鈥檚 dismissal has been uneven and appears to be pretextual.

鈥淲hen we started to learn the reasons for his dismissal, I felt downright angry,鈥 said Pavlina Markova, the features editor who will take over for Hall as editor-in-chief next semester. 鈥淭hose reasons and stories didn鈥檛 match, with every new one, it seemed more and more like if they were just making stuff up to cover up the fact that his dismissal was most probably connected to the critical coverage of last semester.鈥

Gallo鈥檚 departure also left the already-understaffed Journalism department with at least one teacher-less course and students unable to get the classes they need to graduate.

DVC says the department is undergoing a 鈥渞evitalization,鈥 attempting to hire new staff and improve the department, according to :

Revitalization 鈥済ives the college an opportunity to review the program and make recommendations about it, how to improve, re-structure, expand, to grow,鈥 [Obed Vazquez, dean of the English and Social Sciences Division] wrote in an email. He said that faculty members were 鈥渉ired as needed鈥 and the program will continue to seek full-time faculty. For now, it has just two adjunct professors.

Last month, FIREand the penned a joint letter to DVC detailing the apparent retaliatory firing and reminding the public school that failing to rehire a media adviser violates state and federal law, as well as DVC鈥檚 promises to its students.

鈥淒eclining to rehire a student newspaper adviser because of editorial decisions,鈥 the groups wrote, 鈥渧iolates the First Amendment and California Education Code sections 66301 (The 鈥楲eonard Law鈥) and 76120, as well as DVC鈥檚 own stated commitment to free expression.鈥

DVC鈥檚 response to our letter failed to adequately address our concerns.

A 鈥榙epressing鈥 semester

FIRE say The Inquirer has suffered since Gallo鈥檚 unexpected departure.

鈥淚f there ever existed a person to be the adviser of a student newsroom, it is Fernando,鈥 Markova said. The loss of his guidance, she said, rendered her 鈥渃onfused and utterly hopeless.鈥 

鈥淲e lost the one person who stood up for us when the administration came after us,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 lot of things that are the adviser鈥檚 job fell on the shoulders of the students. This is not to say that it鈥檚 the fault of our current adviser,鈥 Markova added, 鈥渂ut he didn鈥檛 have any experience advising student newsrooms and had to start learning everything as he came to us.鈥

Student control of student newspapers, even ones operated as part of a class, is considered a best practice under both the 鈥檚 and the 鈥檚 for advisers. At the same time, as the code of ethical behavior explains, an adviser is an educator and a role model. In that sense, an adviser鈥檚 relationship to a student newspaper is like a football coach鈥檚 relationship to the team: They may not actually be on the field, but highly successful programs have strong advisers to guide the independent editorial staff. 

鈥淲ith Fernando gone,鈥 said Aryana Hadjimohammadi, a journalism major and reporter at The Inquirer, 鈥淚 have seen the editor-in-chief, Emma Hall, lead the program but I have also seen her stressed multiple times throughout the semester with the amount of workload she has had to do.鈥

"I think that Fernando鈥檚 dismissal was really upsetting and unjustified,鈥 Hadjimohammadi said. 鈥淭here was no clear answer as to why he was dismissed and I am still to this day confused as to why he was fired.鈥

鈥淚 was looking forward to taking two classes with him this semester, but now he is gone,鈥 said Eric Dionne, another Inquirer reporter. 鈥淭hey also canceled one of the journalism classes because DVC had no one to teach it. Now I鈥檓 forced to stay an extra semester because it was the last class I needed to take to graduate.鈥

Dionne described the situation as 鈥渧ery frustrating.鈥

鈥淔ernando鈥檚 style challenged his students to go out of their comfort zones in reporting,鈥 said Gavin Rock, the Inquirer鈥檚 former sports editor, who transferred to Sacramento State University. Rock accused DVC of 鈥済utting the Inquirer.鈥

鈥淭hings are way better here at Sac State,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ac State journalism professors are encouraging and engaging, and like Fernando, adviser is very pro-student.鈥

For Hall鈥檚 part, she鈥檚 had to take on that role, pushing students to continue reporting on administrative issues for the benefit of the student body, even where students have expressed concerns about going up against DVC.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been very depressing this semester,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 am concerned that once I leave and once our next editor-in-chief leaves that coverage will soften. We won鈥檛 necessarily have pieces that hold the administration accountable, and, most importantly, be a voice for the student population.鈥

Journalism program in jeopardy

DVC鈥檚 promised 鈥渞evitalization鈥 of the broader journalism program has also not materialized.

鈥淭he program is dying and nothing is being done,鈥 said Markova, the incoming editor-in-chief. 鈥淚t looks like the plan is to wait for the program to quietly disappear.鈥

The students at The Inquirer have ideas on how to save the program and are meeting with administrators; they just hope DVC will listen.

鈥淔or starters, having someone who honestly cares about journalism in the administration would be a good first step towards making things right,鈥 Markova said, noting that the time limit on the revitalization is a short two years. 鈥淚f nothing changes, the program will be gone completely.鈥

鈥淭hey need to hire a full time faculty member who can act as a department chair, and provide more journalism professors to students,鈥 said Rock, the student who transferred.

DVC, in its response to 果冻传媒app官方, claims to be doing just that.

Hall said she鈥檒l believe it when she sees it.

鈥淔IREshould be able to pursue journalism, even at a community college level,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need stability in this program.鈥

Right now, despite her best efforts, Hall said stability feels far away. Another word comes to mind.

鈥淣eglect. Neglect is the perfect word to describe how the administration has treated us.鈥

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share