Again, I'd like to remind everyone - this is a journalism student, not a professional journalist. I've worked with city college students for a few years and if you read the opinion page at any community school paper you're going to find many articles that are misinformed, biased, lazy, and for the most part, amateur. Well written, educated opinions pieces are the exception and not the rule. Those are the few that win awards.
What generally happens in a journalism class goes something like this: the editors of each section (news, sports, opinion, entertainment, etc.) get together and have a meeting to pitch ideas. Many of these ideas ape what's being printed nationally and locally. The opinion editor comes up with four or five story ideas. The editors will then assign or pitch the ideas to the students (and at a city college that can mean 10 - 20 students). They always have more stories than students.
The writer then has 4-5 days to turnaround the article for editing. Slackers usually latch onto opinion articles because they don't see the need to really research the topics and assume they know everything already. Since they don't have to interview any sources or take notes at a speech, they will procrastinate. They will hand in the article at the last possible minute (sometimes while the production/layout process is taking place). The editor will not have the option of scrapping a junk opinion piece because there are no backup stories to run. So rather than run a paper with a big hole on the page, the editor corrects grammar (ugh) and at least get the sentences readable. Most of the design/layout/corrections are done in one afternoon before the templates are sent to the printer.
Most schools have an online edition, but the main focus is still getting the actual paper edition out. It's a busy process and school papers are always understaffed.
I'm not saying I agree with the opinion piece. All I'm saying is that I'm sure the author had no clue that he or she was would be messing with the ECF. After watching students take on many inflammatory and divisive topics, this one doesn't shock or surprise me.
Again, great work, Kristin, but I'm willing to give the kid a break (or at least forget about the whole ordeal).