Today, we unveil the winners of the Poynter Journalism Prizes. This is your invitation to join us in a celebration of journalism.
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Join us today as we broadcast the winners of the Poynter Journalism Prizes |
We're rolling out the virtual red carpet today to honor some of the best American journalism of the past year.
Join us on poynter.org at 2 p.m. Eastern as we announce the winners and finalists of the 2024 Poynter Journalism Prizes.
The 10 prizes honor some of the best in U.S. journalism from 2023, with categories for excellent writing, local accountability reporting, community-minded public service, justice reporting, editorial and column writing, innovation, diversity leadership, and First Amendment work.
"We can't wait to unveil the really terrific work that is being honored by this year's prizes," said Jennifer Orsi, Poynter's senior director for publishing and local news initiatives and the director of the Poynter Journalism Prizes. "Our judges remarked again and again how impressed and inspired they were by the depth of quality in the entries this year."
You can add this event to your calendar whether you use Google, Outlook, Office 365 or Yahoo.
"Economically, the past year has been a difficult one for lots of newsrooms," Orsi said. "But the entries in this contest showed there remains a huge volume of important, change-making journalism being done across the country."
Keep reading to find out more about Poynter's efforts to celebrate and enhance the work of journalists. |
Application deadline extended
There are a handful of spots left in this in-person and online training. But hurry — applications close today!
TV and video producers accepted into the Poynter Producer Project will learn from dedicated journalists like CNN's Ramón Escobar, Bervette Carree, and Poynter's Kelly McBride and Kerwin Speight. You can read more about lead faculty Speight's background, work ethic and teaching style in this recent Q&A, "Here’s your chance to train with a journalist so dedicated, he’ll walk to work in a blizzard."
Participants will learn to tell stronger stories, produce engaging newscasts, make tough calls on deadline, manage the complexities of the journalism industry’s impact on local newsrooms, enhance their news judgment, develop critical thinking skills and grow their newsroom leadership.
Cost: $799. |
Online seminar
May 7-June 11
The Dallas Morning News’ Tom Huang is a champion for early-career journalists. You can read more about this course and his devotion to mentorship this recent Poynter Q&A ‘I’m seeing on a very personal level how challenging it is to be a younger reporter these days.’
As lead faculty, Huang is bringing this champion mentality to our six-week virtual seminar that equips reporters with the tools and one-on-one coaching they need to hit the ground running and build a successful career. Along with Huang, assistant managing editor for journalism initiatives at The Dallas Morning News, you'll learn from Fernanda Camarena, Poynter faculty, and Kathleen McGrory, editor, local investigations fellowship at The New York Times.
This course is designed for reporters with up to six years of experience. Hurry! Applications close April 26.
Cost: $499. |
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Lead with Influence (June 2024)
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Virtual course, June 3-24
Most leadership training is designed for supervisors who have direct reports. But in today’s newsrooms, leaders are just as often responsible for projects, products or people across departments. Demonstrating leadership without formal authority is its own skill, and it’s core to this online leadership workshop from Poynter.
Specifically designed for women and nonbinary journalists, this is the second of our three virtual leadership trainings for those who want to flex their organizational muscle, but who have no direct reports — leaders who manage big responsibilities like processes, products or platforms.
The deadline to apply is May 6.
Cost: $600. |
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Attendees at a Poynter training in Chicago on covering political extremism listen to Chris Jones, director of research and security at the Rural Digital Resiliency Project. (Julia Fitzgerald/Poynter) |
Beat Academy: Extremism reporting grants |
Applications due Friday, April 26
Earlier this month, a group of journalists gathered for a free training workshop in Chicago to discuss best practices in covering political extremism, thanks to the Joyce Foundation — which is also funding three $10,000 reporting grants.
The grants are open to journalists across the country, although there is a preference for journalists in the Great Lake states of Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio.
By the grant application deadline, you must enroll in Beat Academy and watch "Extremist Politics: How to report on powerful undercurrents in the 2024 elections," recorded Feb. 1 and 15.
Beat Academy enrollment is $75 and provides access to all eight webinar series. The cost is just $50 per person if a newsroom enrolls five or more people. |
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MORE TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES |
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Reporting on the Rise of AI
In-person workshop, June 28
This free, one-day workshop will give Washington, D.C.,-area journalists a chance to connect with RAND’s top AI experts in sessions that examine AI and social bias, the workforce, misinformation, and the industry interests that will shape government regulation.
Free. Apply now.
Work-Life Chemistry
Six-week newsletter course
Kristen Hare, who teaches and covers local news for Poynter, has spent years preaching this popular reframe for work-life balance. In this course, she'll walk you through discovering your formula, building it for growth and using it to combat burnout.
Cost: $50. Enroll now.
Poynter ACES Intermediate Certificate in Editing
Self-directed online course
This seven-course certification program expands on our introductory certificate and offers a thorough grounding in the skills editors need to succeed in today's news, corporate and freelance environments.
Cost: $250 or $175 for ACES members. Enroll now.
Understanding U.S. Immigration from the Border to the Heartland
Self-directed online course
This newly updated and expanded, six-part self-directed course will give journalists a thorough understanding of immigration and immigrants in the United States, as well as the skills and resources to produce strong, accurate storytelling.
Free. Enroll now. |
Your newsroom needs an AI ethics policy. Start here. |
Artificial intelligence is out there, and more people are using it than you might think — including in your newsroom — so Poynter assembled a team to create a guide to help you think through how to make sure your team is using it ethically.
This toolkit will give you a statement of journalism values that roots AI experimentation in the principles of accuracy, transparency and audience trust, followed by a set of specific guidelines. This framework can be customized by newsrooms of any size. |
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Keep these resources coming. Your gift fortifies journalism's role in a free society. |
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Post your job today today to find the talent you need. |
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