East Bay Times

Student-run news organizati­ons ramp up Spanish-language coverage

- By Emmely Ramirez and Olivia Keeler

Many student-run newspapers throughout the Cal State system now provide content in Spanish. But how they do it — and the reasons why — vary from campus to campus.

A campus newspaper's ability to publish in Spanish hinges on having Spanish speakers on staff, and the turnover of student journalist­s from semester to semester can make or break a newspaper's ability to publish in Spanish.

Adriana Hernandez, editor-in-chief of San Francisco State's Golden Gate Xpress, knows her publicatio­n is one of the luckier ones.

“We either translate or do original reporting (in Spanish) — depending on the situation or urgency — for our Spanish section,” Hernandez said.

San Francisco State is the first campus among the Cal State schools to offer a major dedicated to bilingual Spanish journalism, giving its student journalist­s consistenc­y from one year to the next.

Contrast that to California State University, Sacramento. The State Hornet struggles to find students who are prepared to provide Spanish-language content to their peers.

“Last semester, we had four staffers; this semester we had five,” said Editor-inChief Mercy Sosa. “I will say that every semester we have adapted, grown and found more tools that are at our disposal, but we are still obviously learning ourselves, so not everyone is as confident with Spanish writing.”

Fernando Gallo, adviser for The State Hornet said, “It is a challenge to find students that can read and write in Spanish here.”

At San Diego State University, Jennifer Aguilar is a senior and a first-generation transfer student. Aguilar is the editor of Mundo Azteca, an entire Spanish section of San Diego State's student-run newspaper, The Daily Aztec. She says her role is to “translate or help others write their stories in Spanish.”

“We recruit students every year, which is how we keep it going as students leave,” Aguilar said.

And at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, students who are not journalist­s but are instead majoring in Spanish have contribute­d to The Mustang News.

Martha Galvan-Mandujano, an assistant professor of Spanish, has encouraged her students to assist.

“Some of my students have helped as editors, translatin­g or writing news in the past. I think they started in 2021-22,” Galvan-Mandujano said. She teaches a course on Spanish journalism for the university's world languages and cultures department and has “recommende­d students (to The Mustang News) in the past and tried to encourage my advanced Spanish students to participat­e” in working with the newspaper.

Beyond logistics is the bigger picture of why it matters.

“I think it's important to include Spanish language in our reporting to be able to give the community a voice to represent themselves,” Hernandez said of San Francisco State's Golden Gate

Xpress. “It also reflects on how diverse our newsroom is — our sourcing, and the kind of work we do. Every community deserves to have their voices heard and be well informed.”

Hernandez admits that metrics for their Spanish stories aren't high. “However, we have seen outliers from story topics (that) connect with our community. We have seen a lot more activity in our Spanish multimedia content, ranging around 5,0009,000 views on social media,” adding, “We have seen a lot more engagement from our Spanish-language audience through Instagram, for example, as well as reaching others outside of SF State.”

At Cal Poly Humboldt, what was once a Spanish-language insert into The Lumberjack, the campus newspaper, has become main news source for the region. El Leñador (The Lumberjack in Spanish) moved beyond covering campus events to topics of broader interest to the Humboldt County community, such as housing and immigratio­n, as well as profiles on local Latino businesses.

El Leñador was formed in 2013, after Cal Poly Humboldt was designated a Hispanicse­rving institutio­n. Twentyone of California State University's 23 campuses now meet the criteria for becoming HSIs.

Gallo, adviser to Sacramento State's The State Hornet, also highlighte­d the importance of the paper's bilingual efforts, given that the university is an HSI with a

Latino population of more than 35%.

“Spanish is the one that I know, it is the one that I grew up with,” The State Hornet's Sosa said, “so it is the one that I can work with at the moment. But I think it is important for us to know that even though we live in the United States, there are people here speaking in other languages that deserve to have this service, which is what I think journalism is.”

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