The Guardian (USA)

Student newsrooms at HBCUs to receive $200,000 in boost for journalism

- Adria R Walker

Ten student newsrooms at Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es (HBCUs) will receive nearly $200,000 to help improve campus newsroom technology, business operations, audience engagement and reporting. The grants, given by the Center for Journalism & Democracy at Howard University via its Newsroom Innovation Challenge, were announced on Friday.

“HBCU student newsrooms brim with talent, but often lack the resources needed to give students access to the cutting-edge technology and operationa­l support that so many of their peers at predominat­ely white institutio­ns have,” Nikole Hannah-Jones, the center’s founder, said in a statement. The money will also allow the newsrooms to pay stipends for student journalist­s, many of whom are unable to volunteer at their campus news organizati­ons because they need to work jobs that pay.

Howard University’s the Hilltop and HU News Service, and campus newsrooms at Morgan State University, University of the District of Columbia, Morehouse College, Florida A&M University, North Carolina A&T University, North Carolina Central University, Savannah State University and Texas Southern University will each receive award packages that range from $4,000 to $29,000 and a one-time technology award.

Additional­ly, the newsrooms will receive funding to hire contributi­ng writers, which can be renewed by applicatio­n for up to five years. The newsroom teams will include a faculty adviser, a student staff member and two additional students who will be responsibl­e for implementi­ng the various growth plans.

The Trilogy, the University of the District of Columbia’s campus paper, has not been published in a decade, back when many current students were in elementary school. But with the grants received through the Center for Journalism & Democracy, UDC students will bring the paper back. Texas Southern University will use its award to launch a physical newsroom with computers and field kits for its staff. It will also be able to pay editors.

The news of the Newsroom Innovation Challenge awards comes just a month after the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announced its HBCU Science Journalism Fellowship, a fellowship program to provide HBCU students with training, mentorship and early-career support for reporting on science, health and environmen­tal issues. That fellowship’s inaugural cohort includes 10 journalist­s, representi­ng Howard University, Morgan State University, Florida A&M University, North Carolina A&T State University and Hampton University.

 ?? Photograph: Marcus Ingram/Getty Images ?? Nikole Hannah-Jones, founder of the Center for Journalism & Democracy at Howard University, speaks at Morehouse College in Atlanta in 2021.
Photograph: Marcus Ingram/Getty Images Nikole Hannah-Jones, founder of the Center for Journalism & Democracy at Howard University, speaks at Morehouse College in Atlanta in 2021.

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