Acm-citij-news
Community Media and the Future of News
(A discussion at the Alliance for Community Media annual meeting in Pittsburgh, Penn., July 9, 2010. Simple URL for this page: http://tinyurl.com/acmcitij )
AGENDA
Who are our discussion leaders?
- THE RESEARCHERS: Bill Densmore, Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (Block by Block, Sept. 23-24) / INFOTRUST.ORG
- THE PRACTITIONER: Laurie Cirivello, Grand Rapids Community Media Center/ Rapidian
- THE THINK TANK: James Losey, Open Technology Initiative/The New America Foundation
- THE ADVOCATES: Candace Clement, MediaMinutes, FreePress.net
What do we want to accomplish?
- Connect the policy discussion with what's happening on the ground.
- Report to the Aspen Institute for its Knight Foundation followup work
How do PEG/Community Media Centers feed these three objectives?
(Report of the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities, Page XI)
- Maximize the availability of relevant and credible information to all Americans and their communities;
- Strengthen the capacity of individuals to engage with information; and
- Promote individual engagement with information and the public life of the community.
After we hear from our discussion leaders, we're going to make a list of bullet point methods for achieving those three objectives, with the help of PEG/Community Media Centers.
Mike Fancher, retired executive editor, The Seattle Times, ethics chair, American Society of News Editors, former Reynolds fellow:
"Have the community at the center of everything you do. Bring people into your thought process. Get the benefit of finding out more precisely what their news information needs are, and be in a real partnership with them. And for Heaven's sakes, take advantage of their intelligence, their knowledge of the community and their ability to help you create better journalism. I think that would be a very important starting point."
Legacy newspapers are experimenting
Hearst in the Bay Area and Texas . . .
OJR: The Online Journalism Review February 26, 2010
The pros and cons of newspapers partnering with 'citizen journalism' networks,br>
By Gerry Storch
Bleacher Report, which calls itself "the Web's largest sports network powered by citizen sportswriters," begins a partnership with Hearst to introduce local online editions in the newspaper publisher's four largest markets, including San Francisco Chronicle's SFGate, the Houston's Chronicle's Chron.com, the San Antonio Express-News' MySan Antonio.com, and Seattlepi.com.
Essentially, headlines will be pulled into the main sports page, highlighting local content from Bleacher Report's citizen journalists.
-- SNIP --
Indiana University journalism professor David Weaver doesn't even think citizen journalists should be the correct term in this discussion. "Citizen communicators" would be better, he says, because "without the training and education that most journalists have, most citizens cannot qualify as journalists."
Journal Register Co. in Michigan . . .
http://www.pressandguide.com/articles/2010/04/26/news/doc4bcde5f71f5f4841008725.txt
YARDLEY, Pa. — Journal Register Co., a news and multimedia company that owns The Press & Guide Newspapers, announced a major citizen journalism initiative yesterday in conjunction with SeeClickFix . . providing SeeClickFix portal pages on JRC Web sites that will allow users to observe, report and follow issues in their communities. Web site users will be able to create watch areas and track items ranging from poor road conditions to blighted buildings.
The company believes this partnership will benefit the communities by:
- Encouraging the audience to utilize the SeeClickFix platform to alert fellow residents of impact issues.
- Empowering residents to work with the company’s journalists to address community needs.
- Highlighting those who participate and make a difference through news reports.
“Our job is to serve our communities through quality journalism,” said John Paton, the company’s CEO. “Our partnership with SeeClickFix will help us do our job much better.