Resource:
Tweets for Keeps: May 2019
Guidance for interviewing sources with mental health disorders, tips for using AI, collaborating with readership to solicit data sets, evidence that people still care about old-school media, a legacy paper becoming a nonprofit “community asset”
Tools & Tactics
It’s very likely that journalists will interview sources with a mental health disorder or cover a story that involves mental health. And getting it right means a more informed public that understands mental health and encourages treatment. https://t.co/AfXEc5arWY
— Poynter (@Poynter) May 24, 2019
Tips & Techniques
New post: data from #AI represents a new challenge for journalists – here are some of the ways we need to adapt https://t.co/3Z68iXuz7F #ddj
— Paul Bradshaw (@paulbradshaw) May 23, 2019
Innovation & Experiments
CrowdNewsroom is a platform @correctiv_org began building in 2015 to get its readership involved in assembling non-public data sets for its investigations. @lenfestinst‘s @ylichterman asked its publisher @David_Schraven about how the platform works https://t.co/7drI4JbsKb pic.twitter.com/aDKexyxrPu
— GIJN (@gijn) May 19, 2019
Reports & Articles
NPR debuts a new Morning Edition theme, and the fact that people care shows the continued power of old-fashioned, non-Internet radio https://t.co/TpQKHZWgB1
— Student Press Law Center (@SPLC) May 12, 2019
People & Collaboration
Salt Lake Tribune seeks to become a nonprofit ‘community asset,’ a first for a legacy newspaper – The Salt Lake Tribune https://t.co/7SwIkRMGrH
— Malcolm Moran (@malcolm_moran) May 8, 2019
The Journalism Accelerator is not responsible for the content we post here, as excerpts from the source, or links on those sites. The JA does not endorse these sites or their products outright but we sure are intrigued with what they’re up to.
Topics: Resources Tweets for Keeps
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