Deadline: 28-Jul-20
The Thomson Reuters Foundation is delighted to offer African journalists, who are motivated to report on malaria, the opportunity to take part in a new remote training initiative, Reporting on Malaria in Africa.
- Deepen participants’ knowledge of malaria and public health more broadly.
- Strengthen journalistic standards and enhance evidence-based reporting skills to help African journalists cover the topic in an accurate and balanced way.
- Provide intensive technical training and unique insights to participants in how to enhance reporting skills in this field.
- Remote training on malaria reporting over three-week period. Approximately 6- to 8-hour time commitment on average per week.
- For selected participants, following the end of the remote course:
- The production of stories on malaria
- An editorial support scheme that will help produce these stories
- Receive training on ethical reporting and standards in health reporting, working with sources, how to search for trusted information and identify fake news, story pitching;
- Deepen their knowledge of malaria and public health more broadly, covering the impact of malaria on economies, society and efforts by countries to meet SDG targets, health systems, scientific methods, new and innovative approaches of reducing malaria incidence and associated challenges and criticisms, and the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on malaria-affected countries;
- Be exposed to expert speakers;
- Gain access to story ideas and editorial advice and will be invited to share your own expertise with other participants;
- Propose one or more malaria story ideas that you wish to work on – if you are selected, they will provide experienced journalists to help you pursue your malaria stories right up to publication/broadcast. Selected participants will receive modest funding to help them realise their malaria stories.
- African journalists, based in sub-Saharan Africa, working as staff journalists or regular contributors to English-language media organisations in their respective countries;
- Journalists working for a news organisation will need consent from their editor to take part. Freelancers should provide evidence that one or more media organisations will be willing to take their work.
- Journalists able to commit to the full length of the 3-week course and to spending significant time working on malaria stories in the weeks following the end of the course;
- Journalists with at least three years of professional experience;
- It is an advantage if you have health reporting experience, but if you have a strong motivation to learn about malaria and health and report on these issues then they will consider your application;
- Journalists working in any medium or multiple media are welcome to apply (print, online, radio or television);
- Journalists applying must have fluent English;
- Journalists applying must have access to a minimum internet speed of 1 MB/second.
For more information, visit http://www.trust.org/media-development/opportunities/?sfid=a053z00000svX2pAAE&sfProgId=a153z00001Fd9x9AAB&areaOfFocus=Environment,%20Health%20&%20Resilience