make sure you invest in a good pair of running trainers.
They do tend to go away with time because your legs become stronger and more subtle. as long as you don't over do it the muscles in your shins should be able to adapt to cope with the stress they are places under (tonnes of pressure travels up the legs during each stride)
It's usually caused by a muscular imbalance (most injurys are) between the calfs and the tibialis anterior.
The calf muscles straighten your foot and make your toes point towards the floor and the shin muscles do the opposite, if your calf muscles are tight then they are always going to be pull at the foot slightly and the shin muscles are going to have to work extra hard to keep correct form.
Shin splints are so common because the calfs are some of the strongest muscles in the body (they can lift 100% of your body weight up onto a tiny level... the tips of your toes) wheras the shin muscles are relativly weak in comparison.
Get some good running shoes fitted, make sure you warm up and cool down properly, stretch your calfs and shin muscles after training to elongate them and releive pressure.
When I had shin splints I used to feel a nice stretch if I paced around the gym walking and when my foot came up off the floor and straight my toe right out so my calf was contracted and my shin muscles were stretched (every join has groups of mucles which move it one way ie: your bicep flexs your elbow and your tricep straigthens or extends is, stretch one and the other will be shorter than the other)
Hard to explain how to do the stretch (which is why I'm rambling on!!!) but it works.
this picture is also a good static one, I supposed walking and flicking would be 'ballistic stretching' one
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