presentation

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The Best of News21: 2009

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Best of News21, 2009

For 2009, the collective efforts of the News21 fellows produced dozens of in-depth packages, exploring a range of issues facing a changing nation, from education to technology to energy.

Some of it deserves a special spotlight, and a half-dozen examples of stellar journalism and presentation are featured on a newly launched page, The Best of News21, at best.news21.com.

This work, supported by the Carnegie Corp. and the Knight Foundation, reflects packaging on complex stories on Muslim-American youth, a voter’s generation gap, the U.S. energy grid, charter schools and tribal cleansing. Take some time to explore each of these exemplar and representative stories from the News21 fellows. And read the press release.

Showing a phenomenon: California’s tribal cleansing

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Trying to paint a coherent picture when your canvas is an entire region is no simple task, but data visualizations are always a good place to start.

My goal was to highlight what in my mind is the most convincing explanation for a rising tide of disenrollments (in essence, large-scale banishment) in Native American tribes. Indian gaming brings wealth, and fewer members in the tribe mean more money for each. But after a decade of reporting on the individual occurrences, I had yet to find any direct comparison of the numbers, so I decided to build my own data set and display it on a timeline-map for my story on California’s tribal cleansing.

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Explaining Your Project(s) & Approach(es)

Monday, July 13th, 2009

This is our nod to transparency, where each News21 fellow or team explains what you did, why you did it — and what others can do to take your approach to the next level.

Our goal is to  well-crafted explanation of how and why you did your project in the manner you did, concentrating especially on what you did in an innovative manner so that it might be refined or replicated in the industry.

Think about it as Coulda-Shoulda-Woulda. You can link to some of your early blog posts that may tell a bit about what you did. But then you should explain your early strategy on how you set about doing your journalism. And now, knowing what you know, you can summarize from lessons learned what you would have done differently. And finally, offer tips for people to learn from your innovation and how they can possibly incorporate it into their journalism. You can also spice it up with screengrabs or photos.

Recently, I noticed Propublica’s Steal Our Code” explainer for its ChangeTracker feature and the Toronto Star’s nerdbox, accompanying its series on mapping data. Those details and tips are what other journalists will find of great value.

For instance, UNC fellows Monica Ulmanu described her process in skinning a video player programmed by Zach Ferriola-Bruckenstein, who explained  how it allows users to search for certain phrases in a video. An overarching post will summarize the challenges and victories in the process, and showcase examples in the “Powering a Nation” project. In fact,  can this paragraph be turned into a post? Pretty nearly, topped by a sharp, relevant SEO-savvy headline.

Given the power of tags, we can do a lot to let people know about your work via automation. When you complete your post, please tag it with at least one of the categories (let me know if you require a different one).

approach | databases | design | infographics | interactives | interviewing | packaging | photography | presentation | reporting | social media | tools | video | writing

Remember, the greater detail you can provide, the better.