journalism

Journalism is a term that is undergoing both scrutiny and rapid change. It describes the professional standards of information gathering, fact checking, and clear communication. The term has expanded to include citizen journalists who report on their communities and bloggers who indulge in everything from gossip to genuine news to personal reflection. New developments in citizen journalism and youth journalism and new formats such as comics are also part of the civic media landscape.

Our projects

Old and New Media: Converging During the Pakistan Emergency

This is a research paper that addresses the knowledge gap about new media and democracy in the developing world, examines how digital technologies – such as cellphones and live internet streams – and new media platforms – including blogs, YouTube, Flickr, and Facebook – were used to access information, organize political action, generate hyperlocal news reports, and promote citizen journalism during the "Pakistan Emergency," a period of heightened political instability between March 2007 and February 2008.

Project team: 
Huma Yusuf

Learning through Interactive Journalism

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New computational tools enable new forms of interactive journalism, making it possible to embed not only images and videos but also simulations, animations, and other interactive content within online newsletters and blogs.

In this project, we are exploring how experiences with interactive journalism can foster new learning opportunities, helping students gain deeper understandings of: (1) practices and challenges of journalism, (2) ideas and strategies of computer science, and (3) issues and values in their communities.

How might communities use it?
School or after school activities teaching young people how to interpret and create interactive journalism.

At what stage of development is it?
Field-tested for over half a year at Fischer middle school in New Jersey. Completing first outreach effort: partnering with researchers from the College of New Jersey (in both journalism and computer-science departments) in a pilot study with middle-school students.

Related Tools & Resources: 
Scratch
Project team: 
John Maloney
Project team: 
Karen Brennan
Project team: 
Mitchel Resnick

Silver Stringers

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Silver Stringers is a program that trains and equips its members to be reporters, photographers, illustrators, editors, and designers of a localized Web-based publication.

How might communities use it?
It is also intended to adapt and develop technological tools to facilitate the journalistic activities of the group. We are interested in enhancing grass-roots communication while at the same time learning new models for media coverage. The News-in-the-Future Consortium of the MIT Media Lab began the project in 1996, working with a group of senior citizens in Melrose, Massachusetts. Realizing that persons over the age of 50 have unparalleled wisdom about the communities where they have lived and worked, we wished to tap into the strength of the older generation in order to develop techniques for the next-generation media coverage of cities and towns.

At what stage of development is it?
Since the project began, we have expanded our vision to include communities of all ages all over the globe. One of them, the Junior Journal, began publishing in 1998 on a monthly basis and has had more than 300 children and teens (ages 9 to 18) participate from more than 91 countries. Publication was suspended in 2005 after all the editors had gone off to college.

Project team: 
Ingeborg Endter
Project team: 
Jack Driscoll

Comix News Network: Webcomics and Student Journalism

Comix News Network is an open source web tool that combines the Drupal content management system with a custom application that allows people to create their own web comics easily and simply as a complement to regular student reporting and a platform for discussions about issues that concern them.

It’s designed to enable and encourage artistic engagement, civic journalism, and social networking.

The idea for this project originated with developments at an after-school journalism program in Kolkata, India.

How might communities use it?
One of the things that building into a content management system will allow us to do is provide a rudimentary student newspaper functionality. During our research, we discovered an unfortunate lack of decent web-based high school newspapers. We aim to create a template for incorporating the comics and blog posts in the Webcomix system into a coherent, easy-to-use mechanism for student reporting/editorial cartooning. Students will be able to use the content management component of the project to have ongoing conversations (using the editorial cartooning component) regarding issues that affect them in their lives and communities.

At what stage of development is it?
Comix News Network is in early development. Once completed, the tool will be open source, allowing for the possibility of other civic media applications for the technology. The tool itself has been built and the content management system will be completed by May 2009.

Some notes on technical aspects:

Comix News Network provides a Dom (Document Object Model) based imagery combiner for
the web. While most 'web comics' solutions are created with opaque
mechanisms (canvas or flash) - webcomix is not. This allows the manipulation
of the comic scene via web standard technologies such as css and javascript.

Some Features:
* Dom Based Creation Tool - Webcomix uses the JQuery UI library to provide a
simple Dom based scene creation tool. Assets can be added and manipulated
within div panels and backgrounds, css and javascript effects can also be
applied.
* Modern CSS Effects - Webcomix makes use of modern CSS3 properties as they
are implemented in modern rendering engines and browsers (webkit, firefox).
For example, webcomix uses the rotation and scaling properties of CSS3 for
asset manipulation.
* Simple Canvas Image Creator - The system also includes a basic pencil
style drawing tool. Images created here are encoded and saved to the server,
allowing users to make quick sketches of assets without resorting to a
complex drawing program.
* Access and analysis - Transparent access to information on assets is
available from the database or through direct manipulation of the Dom. This
allows the compilation of comic statistics and external access to existing
comics at any time in the development of the application.

Project team: 
Abhimanyu Das
Project team: 
Noah Blumenson-Cook

Open Park: a model for collaborative online news production

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The Open Park project looks to define an 'ideal' or at least improved model and practice for online collaborative news-reporting and -writing.

As newsrooms across the country and beyond are grappling with the new economic realities of reduced budgets and news media professionals are busy drafting and testing plans for new models of news production and distribution, the little-explored practice of 'Don't compete, collaborate!' is well worth considering.

Collaboration and the sharing of skills and resources have already proved in other professional spheres that it is a winning formula--one especially well adapted to these economically demanding times. It is thus only logical to explore what this new practice could do for the future of journalism.

At what stage of development is it?
Currently being developed, with field-testing due to start in the fall '09 semester with journalism students. Further development of online collaborative news-reporting tools for OP users, selection of candidates [journalism schools] for testing OP, building of journalism students' teams, development of four case studies for them to cover.

Related Tools & Resources: 
Ellen Hume on the Future of Journalism
Project team: 
Florence Gallez
Project team: 
Nadav Aharony

Community Partners & Projects

Populous

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Populous Project is an open-source newspaper platform that aims to give college and small town newspapers the tools they need to survive in a web 2.0 environment. The project consists of three parts; a content management system that includes audio, photo, video and text, a "digital newsroom" to allow editors and staffers to communicate with each other through mobile and online technologies and the "community news network" that will allow the community members to connect personally with their news in meaningful ways. The platform will allow community members to also publish content to the site, and is funded by the Knight News Challenge.

Banyan Project

The Banyan Project is a group of senior journalists, technologists, researchers, strategists and advocates for strengthening democracy who are devoted to creating a new large-scale model for quality journalism that can thrive in the digital future.

Tom Stites, founder and moderator; see Advisory Board at http://www.banyanproject.com.

Edhat Online Magazine

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Edhat Online Magazine is a local news and information community for Santa Barbara, CA. Edhat started in November 2003. The site includes links to local online news, citizen submissions, columnists, pets of the week, contests, local interest articles, photo galleries, local running race results, comments, breaking news, and other fun stuff.

Media Re:public

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The Berkman Center for Internet & Society's Media Re:public paper series -- News and Information as Digital Media Come of Age -- was put together over the course of a year of examining the news media in the U.S., engaging with journalists, bloggers, citizen journalists, public broadcasters, publishers, advertising networks, researchers, technologists, and many others. It builds on previous discussions and highlights the need for a new public conversation about reinventing journalism in the public interest. This inclusive conversation should aim to build on the best from all areas -- the energy of participatory media and the expertise of professional journalists, the competitive drive of commercial media and the commitment to excellence of public broadcasters, the dedication and deep knowledge of community organizations and advocacy groups and the interests and energy of the public. The Media Re:public project’s research process benefited from a large and varied group of contributors, authors, and interlocutors.

New England Ethnic Newswire (NEWz)

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The New England Ethnic Newswire is a one-stop platform for stories from the 100 ethnic media in the region, together with blogs, photos, audio postcards, resources, and a special health report offering a stream of original medical stories to and from underserved neighborhoods.

Citizen Media Law Project

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The Citizen Media Law Project (CMLP) provides legal assistance, education, and resources for individuals and organizations involved in online and citizen media. The CMLP also provides research and advocacy on free speech, newsgathering, intellectual property, and other legal issues related to online speech.

The CMLP is jointly affiliated with Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, a research center founded to explore cyberspace, share in its study, and help pioneer its development, and the Center for Citizen Media, an initiative to enhance and expand grassroots media.

The CMLP seeks to build a community of lawyers, academics, journalists, and others who are interested in facilitating citizen participation in online media and in protecting the legal rights of those engaged in speech on the Internet.

For more information, please visit our website at http://www.citmedialaw.org/.

Playing the News

The Playing the News project is testing the idea that presenting the facets of complex news issues through the use of game environments or interactions would engage and inform the news audience.

We are developing two different game approaches.

Printcasting

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Printcasting will make it possible for anyone to create a local printable newspaper, magazine or newsletter that's supported with local ads. No money, tools or design will be required -- only passion!

The Printcasting system turns traditional "terrestrial" publishing roles upside down and inside out so that anyone in the community can participate in one or more of them. We're partnering with the community to help us grow niche audience and revenue organically.

EveryBlock

EveryBlock is a new experiment in journalism, offering a Web "newspaper" for every city block in a number of American cities.

Enter any address, neighborhood or ZIP code in those cities, and the site shows you recent public records, news articles and other Web content that’s geographically relevant to you. To our knowledge, it’s the most granular approach to local news ever attempted.

New School Student Ambassadors

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The Project will provide an international project-based participatory learning experience that:

  • Improves language and media literacy skills
  • Enhances cross-cultural creativity and innovation by developing critical thinking skills
  • Focuses on 21st century collaboration and communication skills
  • Builds story telling, persuasion, and presentation skills for US and Chinese students
  • Project-based educational programs will be delivered to teams that combine Chinese and US students through online, interactive environments making maximum use of social media, social production, collaboration, and communication (text, audio, video) tools. New School Student Ambassadors has fully developed and piloted joint US-Chinese participatory learning, project-based programs using open source course management, electronic portfolios, and activity management systems. Through a network of collaborating professionals and organizations, we support teacher/coaching professional development in both China and the US.

    Recent blog posts, discussions, and resources