Latest News

Sunset Beach asks for Bastille Day party permit
Town to mark underwater rock formation in Dering Harbor
LIPA generators coming to the Island
South Ferry hopes dredging can be done to avoid crisis
Dr. Hynes to speak at League of Women Voters annual meeting
Bryan’s song: First Islander across the 10K finish line
Three-run homer sinks Bucks against North Fork Ospreys
Bausman steps down as Island Red Cross CEO
Merchants, board look to lower speed on Bridge St.
More photos from the Shelter Island 10K

Sports

Sunset Beach asks for Bastille Day party permit

June 19, 2013

Bryan’s song: First Islander across the 10K finish line

June 17, 2013

Three-run homer sinks Bucks against North Fork Ospreys

June 17, 2013

Education

$2.8 million school building project begins this month

June 11, 2013

Nonprofit day care in Greenport faces hard times, may close

June 8, 2013

This week in Shelter Island history

June 7, 2013

Business

South Ferry hopes dredging can be done to avoid crisis

June 18, 2013

Merchants, board look to lower speed on Bridge St.

June 17, 2013

Driveway settlement? Judge may impose decision

June 13, 2013

Community

Bausman steps down as Island Red Cross CEO

June 17, 2013

Photos: The Island gets ready for another big race day

June 15, 2013

Letter: Welcome to the 34th Annual Shelter Island 10K

June 15, 2013

Obituaries

Obituary: Barbara Joy Roberts Carlsen

May 28, 2013

Obituary: Reporter staffer David Lee Draper

May 20, 2013

Obituaries: Elmer August Kestler Jr., Lawrence William Sliker

May 9, 2013

Real Estate

Real Estate: The evolution of Greenport's architecture

June 9, 2013

$400K driveway? Owners, landscaper in tangle of suits

May 30, 2013

This week in Shelter Island history

May 30, 2013

Opinion

Letters to the Editor: Dark skies, pro and con

June 13, 2013

Letters to the Editor

June 11, 2013

From Penelope's kitchen: Pacaya Flowers and Yucca Blossoms

June 10, 2013

First student paper for Shelter Island debuts

JULIE LANE PHOTO | Teacher Devon Treharne and student Chandler Olinkiewicz in the Reporter’s newsroom Thursday afternoon with one of the first copies of their pride and joy.

The Inlet, Shelter Island School’s first newspaper, was distributed to students and staff Thursday, hot off the press. It’s the product of 15 journalism students who worked under the direction of teacher Devon Treharne.

The idea started with Superintendent Michael Hynes who asked Ms. Treharne to teach the elective journalism course that’s divided into two sections with students in grades nine through 12 participating. His vision from the outset was that the students would produce a school paper, Ms. Treharne said.

“I’m thrilled,” she said, looking at the 12-page issue in the Reporter’s newsroom early Thursday afternoon. The Inlet contains stories on the loss of study halls in student schedules, the value of advisories — early morning small group sessions designed to set the tone for the day ahead — introductory profiles of new staff and students, sports and entertainment. In her 10 years of teaching at Shelter Island, Ms. Treharne said the school has never had a paper.

“It was a little daunting to take it on,” she said. But early in the process that started in September, she enlisted help from former Reporter Editor Peter Boody to meet with the students to share some basic tenets of journalism.

Ideas for stories and their development were student driven, Ms. Treharne said. While she had to veto an idea or two that the students proposed, she expressed pride in how well they tackled the job of coming up with story ideas and developing them for the paper.

Just before Christmas break, copy written by students on The Inlet’s staff arrived at the Reporter office where graphics designer Barbara Pfanz tackled page layout, just as she does for the the Island’s community paper.

Students chose the name “Inlet” as a metaphor for the publication because it emanates from an interior piece of the Island, Ms. Treharne said.

Besides distributing it throughout the school, she was planning on putting copies at the library so residents could see it.

“Hopefully people will appreciate it and won’t be too critical,” she said.

The students expect to publish two more editions, one in March and the second before school ends in June, Ms. Treharne said.