• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

SLA Media

SLAMedia is a publication of the news for the Science Leadership Academy community. Writers come from the student body in 10th, 11th, and 12th grades. We work in unison to create a functioning paper with biweekly postings on a variety of events.

  • News
  • Features
  • Sports
  • A&E
  • Op/Ed
  • Multimedia
  • About

The Naked Truth: Sexting Scandal Slams Colorado School

December 12, 2015 by lpahomov 1 Comment

Arielle Moore

Staff Writer

Nowadays, picture and video media apps such as Twitter and Vine have become increasingly popular with the new wave of social networking and technology. With this discovery, teens and young adults have discovered new ways to communicate with friends, like pictures or articles, and even display their own content. In these instances, social media can be harmless, but for one Colorado school Instagram is for more than just snapping selfies.

At Cañon City High School, activities such as parties and football games are normal aspects of everyday life as adolescents. Of course communication is a large part of teen interactment, and with phones at their disposal it’s quite easy to send a ten-second invitation to the park for the weekend. At Cañon City high school, a few creative teens decided to turn the use of an innocent photo sharing app into one of the largest scandals the school has ever seen.

For hundreds of students, social media has been used to exchange racy images of themselves between their friends and classmates via “PhotoVault”. Photovault is an app used to send and receive photos that are only visible to you. With this information at their fingertips, the students decided to turn their snapshot-taking into a game, using a point system depending on the level of value the image held. Because of this, many students were pressured to take part in the game which slowly evolved it into a school-wide phenomenon. Within a few months, thousands of photographs were taken and the exchange system between classmates had exploded. With the scandal finally surfacing, a large percentage of the school’s population was suspended and many families have been hurt upon finding out that their children or their children’s classmates had participated in such a scandalous pastime.

So what does the SLA community think of such an ongoing trend? Most students deemed sexting as something that is simply not for school, or even for minors in general. “I don’t think it’s appropriate,” says sophomore Destiny Patton. “You shouldn’t be taking nude photos in school.” 

Some though, took a more diplomatic approach to the situation. Junior Jaiye Omowamide says: “Minors shouldn’t be sending nudes unless they’re in strong relationships. They need mutual communication, but must also be made aware of the consequences.” 

SLA technology teacher Marcie Hull also had a few comments to include about our school and how teens should be handling such situations if ever involved. “The line between protecting student privacy and protecting them from their own dangerous behavior moves and changes shape! It is really a student by student decision making process. I try very hard to explain, to students, in a overarching way, how to protect themselves online,” she explains. ” This explanation has to start with the basics of how the internet works and making students realize that if a photograph leaves your hard drive, even if it is put in a cloud storage, the student no longer has control over who sees or could possibly see that photograph, now and forever in the future. That is the long way of saying there is no line as long as the student is aware of how these tools work and how to protect themselves. It is way better for everyone if the lessons learned turn on an intrinsic motivator to keep one’s online life squeaky clean.”

What do you think? Is sexting just some passing fad or do you think it’s just another activity on the list of teen past-times?

Image: http://www.savvykidsofarkansas.com/savvyblog/is-your-teen-sexting/

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Destiny Patton says

    December 15, 2015 at 5:46 am

    I really loved how this article turned out! Thanks for quoting me Arielle!

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Destiny Patton Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

* Copy This Password *

* Type Or Paste Password Here *

123,673 Spam Comments Blocked so far by Spam Free Wordpress

Primary Sidebar

FacebookInstagramTwitter Snapchat

Features

New Teacher Profile: Alexis Clancy

Braylon Dunlap Staff Writer As many people know, there are a few new additions to SLA’s staff this year with a brand new member being History Teacher Alexis Clancy. If you’re in her advisory or African American history class you may have already met her but there are some other interesting things about Ms. Clancy […]

New Teacher Profile: Mercedes Broughton-Garcia

By Maya Smelser Staff Writer SLA recently welcomed Spanish teacher Mercedes Broughton-Garcia, or Ms. Garcia to her students. After spending 7 years as a science teacher next door at Ben Franklin High School, she is transitioning to life at SLA. Background & Family Life “That’s a loaded question,” Ms. Garcia replied when asked where she […]

Wardrobe of SLA

By Harper Leary Staff Writer Philadelphia is a diverse city, and the student population of Science Leadership Academy reflects that fact— not just with their identities, but also with their fashion choices. If you walk down the hallways of SLA, your head will turn every which way to get a glimpse of all the different […]

How the Pandemic has Changed Live Events

By Maya Smelser & Anouk Ghosh-Poulshock Staff Writers Everyone remembers their first concert. But when the pandemic hit, many tours were canceled or rescheduled. There was a hiatus from live music as people adjusted to their new lives– so many teens missed out on their early concert experiences..  In the past few months, however, concerts […]

How Are SLA Students Are Dealing With Their Last Quarter?

Leticia Desouza Staff Writer After a long yet quick year at SLA, students from different grades have experienced many new things they weren’t able to experience during the 2020-2021 online academic year. After almost 10 months of being back in school, students have encountered difficulties and new experiences that further molded how the rest of […]

Categories

  • A&E
  • Cartoons
  • Covid
  • Faces of 440
  • Features
  • Movies
  • Movies
  • Multimedia
  • News
  • Op/Ed
  • Photos
  • Sports
  • The Rocket Record
  • Uncategorized

Recent Comments

  • martin on Song Review: “Origo”
  • Mekhi Granby on Album Review: Restoration of An American Idol
  • Meymey Seng on Album Review: Culture by Migos
  • Kelsey Brown on Album Review: Restoration of An American Idol
  • Angela Rice on SLA’s New Building Engineer, Ikea

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in