Hello, this is Meera Selva, director of the journalist fellowship programme at the Reuters Institute. We are currently accepting applications for our funded fellowship programme. Post any questions you have here on #RISJFellowships
With me today I have @JustNanaAma and @ShaziaSarwar two journalists who completed their fellowships last year.
It is for journalists with over 5 years experience from any medium: print, broadcast, radio, digital.
Your project with us should be something that will boost your career/your newsroom/the media industry. By either highlighting a problem (press freedom, censorship) or thinking of a solution (membership models, newsletters, readers panels) or both.
We want you to produce something that other journalists and editors can use to inform decision making. We provide expertise and access to a global set of journalists and thinkers as there is a lot to be learnt from speaking to people from other countries.
I am especially interested in journalists working outside capital cities, local, and regional journalism everywhere needs a reboot and we would like to be able to help. #RISJFellowships
Do take a look at our website and apply: deadline 8 Feb and we are unable to accept late submissions. Good luck and thank you for your time. #RISJFellowships
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"Journalists need other journalists. They need new ideas, new solutions, and crucially they need spaces to talk to each other for support, solidarity and to find new ways to think about journalism," writes @MeeraSelva1 in this piece about the programme reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/risj-review/jo…
If you need inspiration for your project, you can check out this thread with examples from our talented Journalist Fellows
2. Previous research has shown digital news sources might be leading to ideological segregation. This study resorts to an unprecedented combination of data to show that increase in mobile access to news actually leads to higher exposure to diverse content
3. This study also suggests that self-selection explains only a small percentage of co-exposure to news and finds that more than half of Internet users in the US do not use online news
2. The report looks into what our researchers call the ‘infodemically vulnerable’, a group that consumes little to no news about #COVID19, and wouldn't trust it even if they did.
📈 Acc. to the data, this group has grown from 6% of the population in April to 15% by late August
3. It's important to bear in mind that:
🗞 Trust in news organisations as a source of information about the pandemic has fallen 12 percentage points from 57% in April to 45% in August.
📺 #COVID19 daily news use has dropped 24 points over the same period, from 79% to 55%
📌 Today we publish a NEW report by @joyjenkins on how local newspapers in Europe have adapted their business & editorial strategies to remain sustainable in the digital age
3. All of the newspapers covered here have shifted from digital strategies emphasising the pursuit of audience reach to a focus on building lasting relationships with readers who will pay for online content in the form of subscriptions, memberships, donations, or micropayments
As authorities consider new restrictions, it's worth looking at the data from our UK #COVID19 news and info project, funded by @NuffieldFound. We conducted surveys from April to August. Here's what we learned
1. Most Brits would take preventive measures to stop infections
2. Even among people who say they do not trust the UK government as a source of info about #COVID19, large majorities say they would take 5 of the 6 preventative measures we have data on. We find still higher willingness to adopt them among those who say they trust the government
3. Even among people who say they are not relying on news organisations for news and info about coronavirus, a majority say they would take 5 of the 6 preventative measures we have data on. We find still higher willingness to adopt preventive measures among frequent news users