Category Archives: Research

        
 
 
 
 

Open call for proposals for high school journalism and environmental science collaborations

To encourage collaboration between high school journalism and environmental science classes, we invite teachers to submit proposals for innovative class projects in which journalism students will report about field research by environmental science students.  Our principal goals are:

  • to help young prospective journalists better understand and explain to the public how science is done
  • to help environmental science students learn to use the media to explain their work to the public.
  • to promote environmental and science journalism

The Knight Center intends to award 1-year competitive grants of $2,000 to up to 3 high schools: $1,000 to the journalism program and $1,000 to the environmental science program for equipment, software or scholarships.  There is a possibility of renewal for 1 or 2 more years.  In addition, the Knight Center will pair each school with a professional journalist to serve as a mentor to participating students and teachers.

Here are the details:

  • Your proposal must include a project description (750 words maximum), the names and contact information for a partnering journalism and environmental science teacher from the same high school; grade levels of participating classes; and the estimated number of students in the participating classes. A proposal form is attached.
  • Your projects must generate student-produced news or feature stories with visuals (photos and/or graphics) for print, online, audio and/or video that your school will disseminate. The Knight Center will also disseminate these stories to the public through our website, and some stories may be posted on Great Lakes Echo (www.greatlakesecho.org), the center’s award-winning online regional environmental news service.
  • Grantees must comply with MSU financial reporting procedures.
  • Grantees (students, teachers and professional mentors) must attend a one-day workshop at
    MSU in Fall 2018.
  • Application deadline: December 1, 2017. Awards will be announced by January 31, 2018.
    Projects should begin in February 2018 and be completed with a final report by the end of
    December 2018. A progress report is required by June 15, 2018.
  • Read about the successful 2016-2017 grantees at http://j-school.jrn.msu.edu/kc/2017/03/21/two-high-schools-win-journalism-environmental-science-grants-from-the-knight-center/

Send along a Grant Application Cover Sheet with the following information:

  • School name and address
  • Participating journalism teacher (name, email, phone)
  • Participating environmental science teacher (name, email, phone)
  • Project description (750 words maximum): What do you intend to do (scientific research
    and journalistic coverage) and how? What are your goals for the project? How will you
    assess accomplishments?
  • Titles and grade levels of participating classes:
    • Journalism:
    • Environmental science
  • Name, title, email and phone of administrator authorizing submission of the proposal:

Submit by December 1, 2017, to Barb Miller at mille384@msu.edu

If you have questions, email Eric Freedman at freedma5@msu.edu

Don’t let statistics scare you

By Tony Van Witsen

Tony Van Witsen

Tony Van Witsen


Statistics are an essential part of journalism yet it’s surprising how often journalists claim to hate numbers. Or so the myth says.
In actual fact, one recent survey showed journalists’ confidence in their mathematical ability was about average–neither especially high nor especially low. (See? You can’t even talk authoritatively about how journalists feel about numbers without resorting to even more numbers.) Continue reading

Visiting scientist, Ken Takahashi, speaks to Knight Center students

BY STEVEN MAIER

Ken Takahashi, scientist at the Instituto Geofisico del Peru

Ken Takahashi, scientist at the Instituto Geofisico del Peru


Ken Takahashi, a research scientist at the Instituto Geofisico del Peru in Lima, visited the Knight Center in the midst of his temporary appointment with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland.
Takahashi is a leading scientist in the study of the domestic effects of El Niño in Peru. He often plays a high-stakes role in communicating the likelihood of floods and drought that often accompany the formation of El Niño in the Pacific Ocean. Continue reading

Knight Center student recognized for food reporting

 

Carin Tunney

Carin Tunney


The Association of Food Journalists recently recognized Knight Center student Carin Tunney for excellence in writing about food.
Tunney received second place in the student division of the 2017 contest for her story about the growing interest in North America in raising insects for food. The story is called  “Can tiny livestock solve big hunger?
The 2017 awards, which recognized excellence in 13 categories of food writing and editing, visuals and multimedia, received 289 entries.
Started in 1986, AFJ’s awards competition is the oldest still-functioning contest for food journalists.
The story appeared in Great Lakes Echo and also in The Food Fix,  both news service published by the center at Michigan State University.
Tunney recently received her masters degree in journalism from MSU. She is now studying for her doctorate at the university.