Does your school have a television news program? If so, are you, the media specialist, responsible for this program? I was curious, so I sent a message to all the media specialists in my district.
What I found was that majority of elementary schools broadcast a short live news show each morning. The media specialist is most often the "coach" and has an application process for students that want to be on the team. Some have several teams that rotate in and out throughout the year. Shows consist of live feeds such as the weather, the pledge and morning announcements, but also incorporate some prerecorded segments as well. From the comments, most elementary media specialists enjoy working with the students to produce the news. However, they do say that it takes quite a bit of time. For instance, one media specialist said that she only has the news show once per week, but her time commitment to prerecord some segments and do the live show is two to four hours per week, similar to those that produce a daily show.
In contrast, the middle school responses were varied. In very few schools, the librarian was in charge of a daily live television broadcast. Several schools told me that another teacher, sometimes the technology 'connections' teacher sponsors the news team. Some middle schools had no daily or weekly television news, but these school media specialists worked with students to read the morning announcements over the school intercom.
Overwhelmingly, high schools, have a Broadcasting class that is responsible for all aspects of the news though usually the closed-circuit equipment is housed in the media center, so the media specialist has to set up the channels. I work in a high school recently talked with our broadcast teacher about how the class is structured. She has a rotation for her students to cover sporting events after school. Since the news has six mandatory segments, she gives groups assigned segments for the week. Segments include sports, club news, fine arts, "Hawk of the Week", "Coming Up", and "Hawkeye" (a very creative storyline for the week). Students are responsible for scripting, recording, editing, and producing a prerecorded news show that is aired once per week during homeroom time. This is always prerecorded. For a while the equipment in our broadcast classroom did not work, so the class would download the broadcast and send up a DVD for us to run on the closed-circuit system.
One thing that was pretty consistent in all schools is that most media specialists are responsible for maintaining some type of scrolling announcements that play on school televisions. At my school, teachers send us a PowerPoint slide and run dates. Every day, my library aids put together a slideshow that runs throughout the day on Channel 4 (we have televisions in all the hallways). Morning announcements are read over the intercom by SGA officers.
I take my hat off to those media specialist that sponsor the news, especially those that have a daily show! It is a time commitment, but a great way to interact with the student body.

