From Barbara Allen, Poynter <[email protected]>
Subject A national nap should be on the ballot
Date November 6, 2022 1:30 PM
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It’s not. Despite the malaise that blankets us, we have to forge on as good role models. Email not displaying correctly?
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** Feeling ill at ease around this year’s midterms? Forge on and look for bright spots
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MediaWise Campus Correspondent Kobe McCloud teaches students at Howard University how to tell fact from fiction online. (Photo by Barbara Allen)

I am probably not alone when I admit I feel a little yucky as a journalism practitioner right about now. Remember when election nights were fun? (Heck, remember when election nights were just one night?) The news leading up to elections had an air of excitement, of possibility, of change.

Now, it just feels dreary.

Polls ([link removed]) dominate ([link removed]) the news ([link removed]) .

Polls ([link removed]) aren’t ([link removed]) to be trusted ([link removed]) .

Election ([link removed]) deniers ([link removed]) are ([link removed]) a threat to democracy ([link removed]) .

There’s no real threat to democracy ([link removed]) — we are being too dramatic ([link removed]) .

There’s actually ([link removed]) a serious threat to democracy ([link removed]) — and journalists aren’t doing enough ([link removed]) .

It feels like the only thing we can really agree about as a country is that we all need a nap. And when we, as a nation, don’t want to get out of bed, that’s a clear sign that we’re depressed. Coming out of a global pandemic, fighting among our loved ones over politics, battling the realities of inflation just to have the basics to live — it’s enough to wish someone would set our clocks back and just magically grant us one more sweet hour of dreamtime. Hmm.

But you know me. I’m a broken record about hope and gratitude, about privilege and humility. So this week, I’ll just tell you that I recently got to go to Howard University in Washington, D.C., where I watched a student I’ve been working with remotely deliver a workshop on internet falsehoods. In real life! I’ve known Kobe McCloud ([link removed]) virtually for the better part of 2022, but this is the first time I ever got to [DEL: shake his hand :DEL] hug him and watch him work.

McCloud is one of Poynter’s MediaWise Campus Correspondents ([link removed]) , who, along with seven teammates, have given more than 100 college classroom presentations this year, impacting thousands of students. Their work is making a difference for students like those at Howard, who responded enthusiastically with questions and comments about their own experiences with mis- and disinformation online. The entire experience of being at the nation’s preeminent HBCU, meeting Kobe IRL and even carving out a little alone time later that day to wander around the monuments on the National Mall all served to remind me that it’s critically important to do little things we love in the service to democracy and education.
After visiting Howard, I came upon The Three Soldiers statue on the National Mall, which I discovered while writing this cutline has a controversial history. You learn something new every day! (Photo by Barbara Allen)

And let me remind you — do something this week to make yourself feel alive and important. Hand over your class to student presentations and admire from the back of the room. Take the long way through campus to catch the last of the changing foliage. Visit a campus newsroom, or offer to help students polish their portfolios during your office hours.

Self care takes a lot of forms. Find yours and embrace it as the crush of The Midterms is upon us. And maybe sneak a nap in.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR


** Local news is disappearing: Students can save it
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Local news is a trusted source of critical information. Hundreds of colleges and universities have found ways to support community news – teaching students to report on their communities, and collaborating with local media.

Interested? Join other colleges in making local news stronger. Bring your students to the table.

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** Classroom resources
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Here’s a great template for investigating dorm room mold at your campus: “MOLD U | Across the state and nation, mold is making college students miserable” ([link removed]) (The Post and Courier, South Carolina)

If — like me — you’re always looking for compelling ways to prove to your students that bias exists in all kinds of different ways, check out this tool ([link removed]) from CJR that measures the newsworthiness of your disappearance. In other words, if you didn’t show up for class tomorrow, what would the media do? It’s a short tool that only asks four questions but shows what outlets are likely to cover your disappearance and how many stories such an event would generate. I suspect it would be pretty eye-opening as an in-class exercise. (Proceed with caution that you don’t tokenize anyone.) Here’s a nice synopsis ([link removed]) of why CJR created this.

Trend alert (though it hardly feels like internet self-diagnosis is all that new): “Teens Turn to TikTok in Search of a Mental Health Diagnosis” ([link removed]) (New York Times)

“The First Amendment Right to Record Police ([link removed]) ”: This is a helpful two-minute video from our friends at First Amendment Watch at NYU and the Free Speech Center at Middle Tennessee State University.

Here’s what happens when student reporters get out and investigate. Love this. “Stanford knew about the campus imposter for a year. He kept coming back.” ([link removed])

Affirmative action is on dockets and in the news. Here’s a roundup for context, should you need it.
* After Affirmative Action: A special report on the imperiled future of race-conscious admissions ([link removed]) and As Race-Conscious Admissions Policies Go Before the Supreme Court, Here’s What 6 Experts Are Listening For ([link removed]) (Chronicle of Higher Education)
* What to expect as the Supreme Court examines Harvard, UNC affirmative action policies ([link removed]) (Washington Post)
* What you should know about the affirmative action case before the Supreme Court ([link removed]) (Al Tompkins, Poynter)
* As courts weigh affirmative action, grades and test scores seen as top factors in college admissions ([link removed]) (Pew Research Center)


** ICYMI
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The Pandemic Generation Goes to College. It Has Not Been Easy. ([link removed]) (New York Times)

Everyone Is a Climate Reporter Now | That’s why journalism schools need to incorporate climate science reporting into their standard curricula ([link removed]) (Nieman Reports)

How HBCU Gameday went from a passion project to a profitable business ([link removed]) (Better News)


** One last thing
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Click here ([link removed]) for an easy test to determine whether you’re getting old. (You are.)


** Resources for educators
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* Language, Math and News Literacy Certificate ([link removed]) (Webinar series) Start anytime
* Understanding Title IX ([link removed]) — Create unique reporting around your school’s cases and institutional practices — Start anytime ([link removed])
* Teach your students how to master the flood of suspicious information taking over the internet with this free, self-directed course ([link removed]) from MediaWise’s Campus Correspondents.

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