Changing Journalism to Change Society

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The Whole Story solutionsjournalism.org @soljourno

Transcript of Changing Journalism to Change Society

Page 1: Changing Journalism to Change Society

The Whole Story

solutionsjournalism.org

@soljourno

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What is journalism for?

What is newsworthy?

How do journalists best serve our audience?

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The reigning myth of journalism….

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…..is a myth

Bad for society.

Bad for journalism.

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Journalism has been

revolutionized in the last 10

years

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But almost all the change is in

platform and technology

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www.solutionsjournalism.org

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To legitimize and spread the practice of solutions

journalism—rigorous reporting about responses to

social problems and their associated results

Our Mission

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Chicago and Fayetteville (NC) have among the highest

rates of violent crime rates in the U.S.

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A special series in the Chicago Tribune aims to “document

how gun violence shocks and destabilizes neighborhoods”

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A Fayetteville Observer series about the issue takes a

different approach

It covers local problems, but also looks for effective models in other cities

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Solutions journalism imposters!

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Hero worship

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Silver bullet

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Favor for a Friend

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Cute Cooking Classes

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Think tank

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The Afterthought

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Instant Activist

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Chris P. Bacon

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Solutions journalism is also not a movement

Citizen journalism

Public journalism

Civic journalism

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In Oct 2013, the Seattle Times launched Education Lab, a year-long project to cover solutions in education

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1. It’s good journalism

• Makes journalism stronger and more complete (tells the

whole story)

• Strengthens traditional problem-focused stories by making

the problem starker

• Fresh, audience-friendly approach to stories often dismissed

as “too depressing”

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2. It can engage the audience

• The story is likely to be fresher

• More likely to be shared on social media

• Makes audience feel powerful, less likely to tune out

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•“News fatigue brought many of the participants to a

learned helplessness response.”

• “Over and over, the negativity of news added to the

desire to tune out.”

•When people think something can be done about a

problem (even something modest), they are more

receptive and attentive to the information

Findings from a 2008 Associated Press study of

young adults

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Results from A/B testing

59%52%

47%

35%

22%

36%

28%22%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

“I felt inspired and/or optimistic after reading the

article” *

Would readmore articles

from the samenewspaper **

Would getinvolved in

working towarda solution **

Would share thearticle **

Solutionsstory

Non-solutionsstory

* Agree or strongly agree** Somewhat likely or very likely

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3. It can be high-impact

• Can lead to more constructive and less divisive conversations

• Advances the public discourse

• Introduces models for change

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•“The solutions stories….probably got the most feedback and they were the most controversial -- I think, in part, because they ruffled the feathers of providers in this community….

•(They) were probably the meatiest of all of the stories in the series. Those were the ones that sparked the most conversation here about what we can do differently and what we are not doing now.”

- Rhiannon Meyers

Corpus Christi Caller-Times

Cost of Diabetes series

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Excessive cynicism = misdemeanor

Excessive gullibility = felony

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Solutions journalism is reporting on something

that’s happening now, and the effects it is

producing

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The 10 Questions

1. Does the story explain the causes of a social problem?

2. Does the story present an associated response to that problem?

3. Does the story get into the problem solving and how-to details?

4. Is the problem solving process central to the narrative?

5. Does the story present evidence of results linked to the response?

6. Does the story explain the limitations of the response?

7. Does the story convey an insight or teachable lesson?

8. Does the story avoid reading like a puff piece?

9. Does the story draw on sources who have a ground-level

understanding, not just 30,000 foot expertise?

10. Does the story give greater attention to the response than to a

leader/innovator/do-gooder?

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When should I look for a solutions story?

The problem is widely shared

A key cause of the problem is widely shared

Actors in a comparable situation have found newsworthy responses to that key cause

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I can’t find a solutions story!

Search more broadly – or more narrowly

Look for a solution to the small slice of the problem that most affects your area

Define “solution” down; it doesn’t have to be thesolution to the problem

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Vetting a solutions story

It doesn’t have to be the best solution

It doesn’t have to be 100% successful….or even 50%

It just has to be a good story

Tell the reader about its limitations

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Solutions stories have characters…

…but the story is what the characters are doing:

Show them trying to solve a problem

Show the results they’re getting

Show how this differs from what others do

Show what can be learned from it

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Solutions stories have tension…

…but the tension isn’t from the clash of two sides, or

“will they succeed?” It’s from:

How will they solve this problem?

How do they overcome the obstacles in their way?

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Who, what, when, where, why…..and how

Details add interest and credibility

The 5 W’s plus H

Our hero

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Covering a specific program

A solutions story is a

good way to catch

readers who might skip

over a more traditional

report on a “too

depressing” issue

Fayetteville Observer: A second chance for a violent 16-year-old

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Covering a specific program

“Educare’s operators

seek to demonstrate––

to policymakers and

the public––effective

strategies to stop poor

children from falling

behind.”

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Covering new initiatives

A new, unproven, idea

can be a solutions story

just lay out the

evidence and tell the

listener why you’re

doing the story

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Covering academic studies

Academic studies can be

covered in a brief note –

or they can be the

foundation for a major a

reported feature

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Quickies

If the problem is

widely known, you

can spend a sentence

on it and go right to

the response. Here’s a

solutions story in 576

words

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Data-driven stories

Look for the positive

deviant. Kentucky residents

greatly increased physical

activity between 2001 and

2011. How?

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Comparing two examples

Keegan Kyle in the OC

Register looks at Santa

Ana’s failed efforts to

deal with prostitution –

and a successful strategy

in nearby Anaheim

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Comparing two examples – Miami Gardens

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Comparing two examples – Miami Gardens

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Comparing two examples – using data

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Good Samaritan Medical Center

West Islip, Long Island

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Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center

Suffern

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Part of a longer series or documentary

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As a frame for an investigation

A successful response

to a problem can

begin and frame a

project or

investigation

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Covering responses to problems

without advocacy, PR or fluff makes

journalism stronger and makes society

stronger

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Tina Rosenberg: [email protected]

www.solutionsjournalism.org

@soljourno

solutionsjournalism.org

@soljourno