
The study also found that girls tended to self-censure themselves more often than boys. Some 53 percent of girl high school journalists reported that they did not cover a particular issue because they anticipated a negative reaction from school officials. Only 27 percent of male high school journalists reported they had stayed away from a certain topic due to the perceived repercussions that might occur.
Some of the subjects that girls said they were not allowed to cover included drug use, teen pregnancy, LQBTQ issues, same-sex marriage, and teacher misbehavior.

Co-author Peter Bobkowski, an assistant professor of journalism, added that “school administrators and teachers appear more likely to prevent girls from covering the issues they see as important in the student media than they are to prevent boys from doing so. Instead of empowering girls and building up their confidence, journalism classrooms appear to be one more setting where girls’ voices are disproportionately devalued and muted.”


