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The
Awards...
The
Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism spotlight
news and information providers who offer more than multimedia
journalism. The awards honor novel efforts that seize and create
opportunities to involve citizens in public issues and supply
entry points that invite their participation or spark their
imagination.
Honored
are pioneering approaches to journalism that:
- Encourage new forms of information sharing.
- Spur non-traditional interactions that have an impact on community.
- Enable new and better two-way conversations between audiences and news providers.
- Foster new ways of imparting useful information.
- Create
new definitions of news.
Entries
could consist of
such
things as online news experiences, news games, mobile news ideas,
citizen media, creative use of cell phones, Webcams,
vlogging, podcasting, social networks, computer kiosks, new
applications
of
software,
content management systems and other advances in interactive
or participatory journalism.
Entries
may also demonstrate
simple efforts that notably connect in new ways with a community.
Entries
from all news producers are eligible. Encouraged are both top-down
and bottom-up
innovations, those driven by news creators and those driven by
news consumers.
The
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation has funded a $16,000 awards
program to honor the creative use of new technologies to
engage people in important public issues and to showcase
compelling models for the future of news.
Among
the prizes to be awardeded are:
- A
$10,000 Grand Prize.
- Up
to $5,000 in Special Distinction Awards, including a Wild
Card Award, to be given at the judges' discretion.
- A
$1,000 Citizen Media Award.
What's
a Wild Card Award?
A
Wild Card Award will be given at the judges' discretion
to an early idea that may not be fully developed or a good
idea that deserves a megaphone alongside the top winners.
The Citizen
Media Award honors
impact and achievement in the emerging field of participatory
news and user-generated content. It will be given to
an exemplary effort that meets at least one of the following
criteria:
- Spotlights
and positively impacts under-covered issues.
- Builds
innovative on-ramps for citizen participation and dialogue.
- Pioneers
new ideas for community media.
To
Qualify for the Citizen Media Award
Entries must consist of
local news, information or conversation projects to
which non-professional journalists contribute content.
The contest is open to all citizen media efforts originating
between January 1, 2007, and June 11, 2008.
Winners will be announced in the summer of 2008 and are
expected to participate in a fall 2008 panel at the Knight-Batten
Awards Symposium
and invited to help educate the profession about journalism innovations.
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Deadline for Entries:
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
To
Qualify for the
Knight-Batten Awards
Entries must consist of journalism
content created by a news-producing initiative. Individuals must
have been affiliated with such initiatives at the time of publication
to enter. The contest is open to all news efforts originating between May
1, 2007, and June 11, 2008.
Please
read the Guidelines.
Apply
online here.
The
Future...
Nineteen
years ago, James K. Batten, the respected chairman and CEO
of Knight Ridder, urged journalists to adapt for
the future and to "invent new ways to make the public's
business rivetingly interesting -- and much more difficult to
ignore."
"We need a fresh journalistic mindset rooted
in our past," he said in 1989, "but shrewdly and tough-mindedly
in
touch
with
the
realities
awaiting us."
Now,
new technologies present journalists with fresh challenges --
and new opportunities. "We should figure out how to turn the
Web on its head, so it allows us to connect not the virtual,
but the geographic communities that we still live in," said Alberto
Ibarguen, former publisher of the Miami Herald and now president
of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
To honor new visions for the future of journalism, the Knight Foundation
has created the Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism.
This $16,000 awards program spotlights
emerging models of journalism that most creatively use new
information
ideas and technologies to engage and educate people about important
public issues in compelling new ways.
The Knight-Batten Awards are administered
by J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism at the
University
of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism.
The Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism are the
successor to the Batten Awards for Excellence in Civic Journalism,
which
were
funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts from 1995 through 2002 and
rewarded innovative journalism that helped to engage people in
community
life.
J-Lab
maintains responsibility for the Knight-Batten Awards' impartiality
and
integrity. For further information, contact J-Lab at 301-985-4020
or e-mail news@j-lab.org. |