Youth Journalism Initiative

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+ THE FUTURE FOR YOUTH JOURNALISTS It’s so bright, we better wear shades!

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A presentation to the Reynolds High School Journalism Institute by Le Anne Wiseman, project director, American Society of News Editors.

Transcript of Youth Journalism Initiative

  • 1.+ THE FUTURE FOR YOUTH JOURNALISTS Its so bright, we better wear shades!

2. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast Space shuttle first launched Personal computers widely available Internet first connection Cell phones widely available Skype and Google Hangout Google Glass 3. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched Personal computers widely available Internet first connection Cell phones widely available Skype and Google Hangout Google Glass 4. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched 1981 Personal computers widely available Internet first connection Cell phones widely available Skype and Google Hangout Google Glass 5. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched 1981 Personal computers widely available 1980s Internet first connection Cell phones widely available Skype and Google Hangout Google Glass 6. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched 1981 Personal computers widely available 1980s Internet first connection 1992 Cell phones widely available Skype and Google Hangout Google Glass 7. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched 1981 Personal computers widely available 1980s Internet first connection 1992 Cell phones widely available 1990s Skype and Google Hangout Google Glass 8. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched 1981 Personal computers widely available 1980s Internet first connection 1992 Cell phones widely available 1990s Skype and Google Hangout 2003 Google Glass 9. + 1986 past, present and future CNN aired its first broadcast 1980 Space shuttle first launched 1981 Personal computers widely available 1980s Internet first connection 1992 Cell phones became available 1990s Skype and Google Hangout 2003 Google Glass 2011 prototype weighed 8 pounds 10. + Early Google Glass 11. + Google Glass Today 12. + Journalism past & present Information less access News weekly or daily Audience little interaction Information unlimited access News instant, 24/7 Audience instant, 24/7 13. + Should student journalism change? The way we were . . . 14. + Percentage of schools with each type of student media Yearbook Newspaper TV Program Radio 94% 64% 29% 3% Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 15. + Number of student media outlets per U.S. public high school Media Outlets 4 3 2 1 0 47% 22% 25% 4% 2% Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 16. + Percentage of student media with online component Now . . Newspaper Television Yearbook Radio Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 17. + Percentage of student media with online component Now . . . Newspaper 27% Television Yearbook Radio Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 18. + Percentage of student media with online component Now . . . Newspaper 27% Television 22% Yearbook Radio Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 19. + Percentage of student media with online component Now . . . Newspaper 27% Television 22% Yearbook 2% Radio Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 20. + Percentage of student media with online component Now . . . Newspaper 27% Television 22% Yearbook 2% Radio 29% Goodman, M., Bowen, C.P., & Bobkowski, P.S. (2011). Student media presence remains strong in American public high schools. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University, Center for Scholastic Journalism 21. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Not if, but how soon Transformation Begins now 22. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Integrated staffs Not if, but how soon Media organization Transformation Begins now 23. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Integrated staffs Multimedia Not if, but how soon Media organization More photos, video Transformation Begins now 24. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Integrated staffs Multimedia Social media Not if, but how soon Media organization More photos, video Twitter, Instagram, Kik Transformation Begins now 25. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Integrated staffs Multimedia Social media Interactive Not if, but how soon Media organization More photos, video Twitter, Instagram, Kik More polls, infographics Transformation Begins now 26. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Integrated staffs Multimedia Social media Interactive Immediacy Not if, but how soon Media organization More photos, video Twitter, Instagram, Kik More polls, infographics Breaking now, post it now Transformation Begins now 27. + Should student journalism change? Yes! All media online Integrated staffs Multimedia Social media Interactive Immediacy Not if, but how soon Media organization More photos, video Twitter, Instagram, Kik More polls, infographics Breaking now, post it now Transformation Begins now 28. + A day in the life of a secondary school journalism teacher 29. + A day in the life of a secondary school journalism teacher Instill journalistic values Deal with legal and ethical considerations Coach staff to cover the school and its community Teach skills: news gathering, news writing, features, commentary, sports, investigative journalism, shoot & edit video, take & edit still photos, record & edit audio Help staff learn how to meet deadlines Balance student opinion & the adolescents maturing perspectives Manage multimedia and online journalism presence Teach design & graphics for print and online layouts Business operations and advertising Manage newsroom and editorial board Work with administration, other teachers & community Develop curriculum & lesson plans Grade and assess student work 30. + A day in the life of a secondary school journalism teacher 31. + A day in the life of a secondary school journalism teacher 32. + American Society of News Editors www.asne.org Top journalism leaders media organizations educational institutions media related foundations & training organizations. 33. + American Society of News Editors www.asne.org Top journalism leaders media organizations educational institutions media related foundations & training organizations. Priorities First Amendment, free flow of information Diversity & inclusion in the workplace and news coverage Promote news organizations roles in informing citizenry 34. + American Society of News Editors www.asne.org Top journalism leaders media organizations educational institutions media related foundations & training organizations. Priorities First Amendment, free flow of information Diversity & inclusion in the workplace and news coverage Promote news organizations roles in informing citizenry Initiatives ASNE Awards Leadership development & diversity Newsroom census Sunshine Week Youth Journalism Initiative 35. + ASNE Youth Journalism Initiative News matters. 21st century skills. Reynolds Institute New Website National Edition MCT Campus Partnership Program 36. + Donald W. Reynolds Foundation High School Journalism Institute Nearly 2,000 alumni of the program We choose who will benefit most & contribute most During the Institute When returning to school When joining national scholastic journalism orgs Free JEA membership Free state/regional membership 37. + SchoolJournalism.org resources and lesson plans Information Literacy News Media 38. + SchoolJournalism.org resources and lesson plans Information Literacy News Media Writing Journalism Nonfiction 39. + SchoolJournalism.org new resources and lesson plans Information Literacy News Media Writing Journalism Nonfiction Citizenship Rights Responsibilities 40. + Teaching Units coming 2013-2014 News Literacy New literacy Media literacy Information literacy Civic engagement and action How to stay informed Knowledge of governmental processes Rights and duties of citizen at local, state, national, global Understanding the local & global implications of civic decisions Ethics Bias Copyright Diversity Libel Plagiarism Law and First Amendment First Amendment Student press rights Invasion of privacy 41. + Teaching Units coming 2013-2014 News gathering Research Leads Interviewing Quotes, attribution Story ideas, angles News writing Basics Who, What, When, Where, Why, How Inverted pyramid Revision Advanced Online/Multimedia Broadcast Specialized writing Data journalism Editorial Entertainment Feature Investigative journalism Opinion Personality profiles Sports Trauma 42. + Teaching Units coming 2013-2014 Editing Copy editing (copy editing marks) Content Editing Fact-checking Grammar AP Style Fact checking Headlines Design and graphics Principles of design Information graphics Newspaper layout Photography & Videography Basics (composition, exposure, editi ng) Cutlines and captions Legal and ethical Storytelling Technical Photoshop InDesign Final Cut Pro 43. + Teaching Units coming 2013-2014 Multi-media and online journalism Audio Blogging Crowdsourcing Community building Design Digital editing RSS readers and feeds Social media Web design basics (coding, SEO, analytics) Broadcast News Magazine News Business operations and strategic communications Setting up a business department Knowing your community Selling/community service Designing ads Budgeting and record-keeping Balanced messaging (diversity and multicultural considerations) Press releases Press conference 44. + Teaching Units coming 2013-2014 Newsroom Management Beats Decision-making Editorial board Full and balanced coverage Organizing a school media organization Newspaper only Multimedia Policies Leadership and teambuilding Other resources For Teachers: Classroom Management Curriculum Grading Workshops Graduate programs Students: Careers in Journalism Scholarships Contests Workshops and camps Future of Journalism 45. + National Edition weekly contest at SchoolJournalism.org Open to all students grades 7-12 in U.S. Students submit best stories, photos, videos $100 gift cards to top five winners Publish winning submissions & honorable mention Naming contest for National Edition $250 to student $250 to school journalism program 46. + National Edition monthly contest at SchoolJournalism.org Open to all students grades 7-12 in U.S. Narrative and visual storytelling Categories Right the wrong Think globally (U.N.) Act locally Readers choice $100 gift cards to four winners Publish winning submissions & honorable mention 47. + McClatchy-Tribune Campus High School News Service Exclusive arrangement with ASNE One-time $100 application fee Licensed for newspaper, online news, classroom use Available weekly: 125 news and feature stories, 20 story packages 5 news graphics, 4 feature graphics 8 editorial cartoons Web content, cartoons, comics 48. + Partnership Program News organizations mentor school journalism programs Application deadline August 1, 2013 Partnerships announced August 15, 2013 $2,000 provided for cameras, computers, software, etc. Goals: Create new school journalism programs Reinvigorate struggling journalism programs 49. + ASNE Youth Journalism Initiative News matters. 21st century skills. Reynolds Institute New Website National Edition MCT Campus Partnership Program 50. + What will future journalists be? Information gathers 51. + What will future journalists be? Information gathers Context providers 52. + What will future journalists be? Information gathers Context providers Fact checkers, source verifiers 53. + What will future journalists be? Information gathers Context providers Fact checkers, source verifiers Nimble niche news marketers 54. + What will future journalists be? Information gathers Context providers Fact checkers, source verifiers Nimble niche news marketers Trusted brand audience builders 55. + Will they take a journalist on the first mission to another galaxy? 56. + Ive always felt that as long as you are alive, you should be doing something that makes a difference . . . You dont have to do big, gigantic things. Just do things incrementally that make a difference. - Barbara Jordan Interview NEA Today, 1992 57. + www.SchoolJournalism.org #@youthjournalism Facebook my.hsj.org