Articles
Projects walkthroughs, tool teardowns, interviews, and more.
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A condensed history of multiracial identification in the United States
By Caitlin Gilbert, Jasmine Mithani, Lakshmi Sarah, and Kaitlyn Wells
Posted onPART 1 OF 2: When it comes to writing about mixed and multiracial people, it is critical to understand the historical context behind the terms, learn how to speak to sources and write about them, and examine any bias throughout the journalistic process. In this article, we are going to review an abbreviated history of mixed-race people in the United States.
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COVID-19 story recipe: Analyze school enrollment changes in the districts you cover
By Vignesh Ramachandran and Daniel Willis
Posted onThe Stanford School Enrollment Project is a collaborative project that collects and normalizes school enrollment data from dozens of states, creating a dataset that didn’t exist before. Here’s how you can use the data to report on your community.
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Exit Interviews: Moiz Syed
By Moiz Syed
Posted onPart of an occasional series offering feedback for journalism as an industry, through observations from news nerds who have recently left the field and still love it.
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Answering your questions on how to redesign brainstorming meetings
By Sisi Wei
Posted onMeetings belong to participants, too: overcoming tech barriers and snackable next steps
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It’s time to rethink how we report election results
By Thomas Wilburn
Posted onWe need to fundamentally rethink the ways we report election results. Many of our maps and practices—from early calls to “trends” in vote share on election night—are confusing if not outright deceptive. The question isn’t “how do we optimize for speed, accuracy, and volume?”, it’s “how do we make sure our practices improve democracy instead of just observing it.”
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Redesign your live meeting agenda doc with these templates
By Sisi Wei
Posted onHow to prioritize people who are participating on their own time
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Empowering editorial teams with product methods
By Lindsay Abrams
Posted onThe iterative, user-centered methods we use in product development make a lot of sense for content, too. Instead of pressing publish and hoping audiences like what we’ve produced, it asks us to have deep, ongoing conversations with those readers, viewers or listeners from the outset, de-risking our work by grounding it in an understanding of people’s needs.
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Network mapping: Learn a 30-minute strategy to find the right audience for your next project (and have fun doing it!)
By Bridget Thoreson
Posted onWhether you’re developing a newsroom-wide strategy for connecting with audiences or you’re looking to quickly find sources for a single story, network mapping allows you to identify what you’re seeking to connect with audiences about, who cares about that topic and how you can reach them.
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News organizations: Here’s what your teams are trying to tell you about burnout
By
Posted onHow leaders can #RethinkBurnout in journalism and create systems for organizational change
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I’m redesigning brainstorming for asynchronous participation and I love it
By Sisi Wei
Posted onWhen I worked in newsrooms, one of the most frequent complaints I heard was about needing to go to too many meetings and therefore not being able to get your work done. But the problem has never been with meetings themselves — but rather whether the people calling the meeting effectively used the time and placed real value on other people’s time.
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Sincerely, Leaders of Color: POCs are expected to be exceptional at everything. That’s literally impossible.
By P. Kim Bui
Posted onLeaders of color are dealing with a double standard: To be considered successful, you must be twice as good. To be a genuine leader, you must show people you aren’t perfect, and have things you’re working on, setting an impossible bar to more achievable heights.
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Slack moderator structures should share power and guard against burnout
By Sophie Ho and Sisi Wei
Posted onFocusing on logistics, emotional labor, welcome and support, safety, and membership review
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Exit Interviews: Nausheen Husain
By Nausheen Husain
Posted onPart of an occasional series offering feedback for journalism as an industry, through observations from news nerds who have recently left the field and still love it.
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Sincerely, Leaders of Color: How to (not) ask for help finding applicants for your program or job
By Angilee Shah
Posted onIf you’ve already posted your job description, you might be too late to get the truly diverse pool of applicants you were hoping for.
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Sincerely, Leaders of Color: Lessons from SRCCON2021
By P. Kim Bui and Emma Carew Grovum
Posted onWhisper networks, everyone needs help, what allyship means, and how there’s no universal answer to DEI
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Sincerely, Leaders of Color: Let’s talk about hurtful corporate speak
By Tony Elkins
Posted onHere are a few phrases you should stop using immediately, and some alternatives you can inject into your daily conversations.
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Sincerely, Leaders of Color: What white allies can do
By Emma Carew Grovum
Posted onWe’re often asked by well-meaning white allies what they can do to support our work. Here’s just a few places to start.
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Exit Interviews: Charlie Johnson
By Charlie Johnson
Posted onPart of an occasional series offering feedback for journalism as an industry, through observations from news nerds who have recently left the field and still love it.
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Sincerely, Leaders of Color: Help Your BIPOC Interns Succeed
By Benét J. Wilson
Posted onSupporting young journalists of color at the beginning of their careers is crucial to retaining them throughout the industry. What you can do to help them survive — and thrive.
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Story Recipe: Checking The Success Of Your State’s Efforts To Restore Voting Rights To The Formerly Incarcerated
By Andrew Calderon
Posted onWe learned that no more than 1 in 4 formerly incarcerated voters had registered to vote in the 2020 election in four key states. We’ve documented our reporting process so you can use it in your state.