Past Workshops

From boot camps for journalism educators to symposia for citizen media makers, J-Lab creates and produces rich opportunities for emerging and established news people to build skills, share ideas and advance journalism. These sessions often take place at national conferences.

Miss something? Check out these past workshops:

SXSW Interactive: Two Panels

Ready to learn about the five journalism disruptors you don’t yet know about? Or why women-led community journalism projects seem to flourish? Make sure to give our panels each a “thumbs up” to get them to the next round of the infamous SXSW Interactive conference next March.

SPJ 2010: Networked Journalism

Can daily newspapers and televisions collaborate with hyperlocal web sites, blogs and other new media makers in their communities? How should a daily newspaper deal with a “blogvertorial?” Which partners best adhere to core journalism values? This session will examine lessons learned from five Networked Journalism pilot projects funded by J-Lab. These projects partnered mainstream news organizations with five hyperlocal sites each in Seattle, Charlotte, Miami, Asheville and Tucson.

J-Lab’s ONA Pre-Conference Workshops

Join us at ONA this year for two pre-conference workshops: Fund My Media 2.0 and Plugging in to Networked Journalism

AEJMC 2010: What do Women Want? What are Women Entrepreneurs Doing?

New media women entrepreneurs area in the vanguard of creating hyperlocal community news sites and placeblogs around the country and new forms of journalism are being created where these sites have launched. Hear from several site founders about what they are doing and why. And hear about new J-Lab/American University research reporting how the new journalism is characterized by a new definition of objectivity, a drive for community conversation and discussion, and broader definitions of “news.”

See Agenda

AEJMC 2010: Luncheon - Networked Journalism: How Old and New Media are Collaborating

Five news organizations around the country are participating in a yearlong pilot project, funded by J-Lab, to see if they can collaborate with at least five hyperlocal sites in each of their communities. They are the Seattle Times, Charlotte Observer, MiamiHerald, Asheville Citizen-Times and TucsonCitizen.com. Seattle has already grown its partnerships. Learn how the collaborations are crafting their agreements, their ethics tandards and more. And learn how they are sharing content and exploring revenue opportunities.

See Agenda

ASNE 2010 Panel: From Competitor to Collaborator

Around the country, start-up community news sites are partnering with daily newspapers or emerging metro news sites to network their content and aggregate audiences, not just stories.  J-lab has seeded five pilot projects to test best practices.  Find out how this is working and where new competition might lurk.

Watch the video

Cool New Apps from Creative Technologists

From real-time debate analysis tools that simultaneously stream video and a rolling searchable transcript to document readers and customized news devices that let you immediately switch your video from your cell phone to your TV when you walk in the house, creative technologists are developing exciting new applications for news.  Some of J-Lab’s Knight-Batten Award winners demonstrate how their technology is contributing to news around the country.  Funded by the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation.

ONA 2009: Fund My Media

Thursday, Oct. 1, 2009 - San Francisco

The digital streets of America are rife with journalists looking to practice their craft and their passion outside the structures of a traditional, brand-name newsroom. This daylong workshop will be full of practical advice—and cautionary tales—for those thinking about striking out on their own. Covered will be starting a site from scratch, looking for funding, making the choice about nonprofit or ad-driven models and how to define success.
Speakers: Susan Mernit, Oakland Local; Ben Burns, GrossePointToday.com; Andy Hall, WisconsinWatch.org; Paul Bass, NewHavenIndependent.org; Debbie Galant, Baristanet.org; Jan Schaffer, J-Lab; Lisa Williams, Placeblogger and H2OTown; Scott Lewis, VoiceofSanDiego.org; Joel Kramer, MinnPost.com; Kevin Braun, E&E Publishing, LLC

See Agenda

AEJMC ‘09 - Civic News Networks: Collaboration vs. Competition?

Friday, Aug. 7, from 12:15 to 1:30 p.m. - Boston

In response to shrinking newsrooms, costly wire services and an emerging culture of collaboration and participatory media, regional news organizations around the country are starting to build innovative consortiums for sharing content on a statewide or regional basis. Participants see it as a win-win: Securing additional feet on the street, broader distribution of their content and less “me, too” duplication of reporting. How is the public served? And can the public participate?
Speakers: Susan Goldberg, Editor, The Plain Dealer, Cleveland; Anders Gyllenhaal, Senior Vice President/Executive Editor, The Miami Herald; Rex Smith, Vice President and Editor, The Times Union, Albany, N.Y.

See Agenda

J-School Entrepreneur Bootcamp

Thursday, Sept. 11, 2008 - Washington, D.C.

What should we teach aspiring journalists these days: Writing and copyediting? Multimedia productions?  They need the right mindsets as well as skill sets. Learn how journalism programs around the country are seeding innovative ideas, launching hyperlocal news sites and breeding new media entrepreneurs.
Keynote Speaker: Jeff Jarvis, Blogger, Buzzmachine.com; Director, Interactive Journalism Program, CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

See Agenda | Listen to Keynote Speech | Read Speaker Bios

Playing the News

Thursday, Sept. 11, 2008 - Washington, D.C.

When does a news “experience” tell the story better than a news “story?” This daylong workshop focuses on what’s happening in the world of news games from election, budget, environmental and other exercises.  We’ll look at the creation, usefulness and ethnics of news games and searchable databases. And we’ll hear from both the journalists and the programmers who build the games.
Keynote Speaker: Ian Bogost, Author, “Persuasive Games: The Expressive Power of Video Games,” Creator of “Fat World” for ITVS, watercoolergames.com.

Agenda | Video and Audio of Presentations | Speaker Bios

UNITY ‘08: “Citizen Media: Entrepreneurial Ventures Plug Gaps in Local News”

July 25, 2008 - Chicago

Around the world, ordinary readers and viewers are contributing photos, video and their own forms of citizen journalism to the news and information landscape. From placeblogs to hyperlocal Web sites, these ventures are gaining momentum, supplementing breaking-news stories, filling voids in local news, and delivering a new competition to mainstream media. Check out audio slideshows from the presenters.
Speakers: Suzanne McBride, Co-founder, ChicagoTalks.org; Abdirahman Aynte, Correspondent, BBC World Service; Bruce Koon, News Director, KQED-FM Public Radio

See Agenda | Check Out Audio Slideshows

SPJ 2007: “Citizen Media@SPJ”

Oct. 4, 2007 - Washington, D.C.

More than 500 CitMedia sites now pepper the hyperlocal newscape. More come online every day. They fill in the news gaps, watchdog local journalists and train future reporters. Now, legacy newpapers are staking out their claims on this turf. Learn what this means for the future of news.
Keynote Speaker: Rob Curley, Vice President for Product Development at Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive

See Agenda and Read Highlights

APME 2007: “Citizen Media@APME”

Oct. 2, 2007 - Washington, D.C.

Fast Forward to the Future was the theme of the 2007 conference of the Associated Press Managing Editors.  J-Lab brought together an impressive group of pioneers to share some good news (and lessons learned) about the growth of citizen media online in this daylong workshop.
Keynote Speaker: Rob Curley, Vice President for Product Development at Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive

See Agenda and Read Highlights

ONA 2006: “Citizens Media Summit II”

Oct. 5, 2006 - Washington, D.C.

Learn about the latest developments, the newest models, and future visions in the fast-evolving world of hyperlocal citizen news ventures. Produced in conjunction with the Online News Association, this day-long workshop had five panels featuring speakers from hyperlocal start-ups and established community news sites, solo journalists, mainstream media and community television. Also, read some initial takes on J-Lab’s study of citizen media projects, funded by the Ford Foundation.

Read Highlights | See Panelist and Moderator Bios

AEJMC 2006: “Citizen Media: J-School Entrepreneurial Ventures”

Aug. 4, 2006 - San Francisco

An increasing number of journalism schools are launching hyperlocal community news projects and using them to train both students and citizens in community reporting. This panel offered a look at emerging models.
Speakers: Jeremy Iggers, Twin Cities Daily Planet; Lew Friedland, University of Wisconsin and MadisonCommons.org; Dave Poulson, Michigan State University and GreatLakesWiki.org; Keith Graham, University of Montana and the Rural News Network

See Agenda and Read Transcripts

Citizens Media Summit

Oct. 24, 2005 - College Park, Md.

A one-day workshop with advice, ideas and collaborative learning for citizen media advocates and editors. Sponsored by J-Lab and the NAA’s New Media Federation, the first Citizens Media Summit featured four panels with the movers and shakers of the early citizen media movement. Discussed were the ins and outs of starting up, examining mainstream models, using the latest tech tools and managing a community of contributors.

Highlights and Handouts | Panelist and Moderator Bios | Attendee Info

AEJMC 2005: “Interactive Journalism Summit: When Consumers Become Creators”

Aug. 12, 2005 - San Antonio

From blogs to hyperlocal citizens media, the consumers of news are reporting it in compelling new ways. Hear from the pioneers: NorthwestVoice.com, MyMissourian.com and the New Voices’ Loudoun Forward initiative.
Speakers: Mary Lou Fulton, The Northwest Voice; Clyde Bentley, MyMissourian.com; David Wiseman, Loudoun Forward

See Agenda and Read Transcripts

UNITY 2004: Gaming the News

Aug. 5, 2004 - Washington, D.C.

Learn how media makers are engaging audiences with new forms of interactive and participatory journalism, from inviting citizen contributions to blogging to involving niche audiences.
Speakers: Mary Lou Fulton, Publisher, NorthwestVoice.com; Retha Hill, Chief Editorial Officer, BET Interactive; Sreenath Sreenivasan, Associate Professor, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism

See Agenda and Read Transcripts

AEJMC 2003: “Interactive Journalism Summit”

July 30, 2003 - Kansas City

Innovative journalists from MSNBC.com, The Seattle Times, Minnesota Public Radio spoke about “news experiences rather than news stories” at this luncheon at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication convention.
Speakers: Eric Pryne, Reporter, The Seattle Times; Mike Skoler, Managing Director of News, Minnesota Public Radio; Angela Clark, Director of Interactive Content, MSNBC.com

See Agenda and Read Transcripts


 

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J-Lab helps journalists and citizens use digital technologies to develop new ways for people to participate in public life with projects on innovations in journalism, citizen media, interactive stories, entrepreneurship, research, training, and publications.

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