NAM Round Table
The NAM Round Table consists of news, insights, visions, ramblings and rants from the writers at New America Media.
Training Ethnic Media

By Sharon Pian Chan, reporter for the Seattle Times (www.sharonpianchan.com).

I spent the past weekend in Chicago speaking at an IRE workshop for ethnic media. IRE, Investigative Reporters and Editors, is synonymous with top-notch watchdog training and its many Pulitzer Prize-winning members. I was impressed by how committed the organization is to helping ethnic media.
Ethnic media workshop
About 20 journalists from Asian American, African American and Latino community newspapers learned how the mainstream media covers cops, business and government in a two-day workshop. I did a workshop on covering business and “Dot-Con Job,” the investigative series I co-wrote on InfoSpace and its founder Naveen Jain. I had prepared a presentation on combing through Securities and Exchange Commission documents but switched gears when I got there. I realized what the community journalists wanted was a thoughtful discussion on how to provide
business coverage that highlights community success stories while also holding businesses accountable to readers. AAJA Chicago chapter Secretary Rui Kaneya (Chicago Reporter) also did a great workshop on covering immigration.

While I was in Chicago, I also met with AAJA members Lorene Yue (Crain), Angie Lau (Bloomberg), Chicago chapter
Co-President Rumanna Hussain (Chicago Sun-Times) and Alana Price (Global Information Network) for dinner to talk about diversity, our industry and the importance of completing our $2
million AAJA national endowment.

Props go to: IRE for inviting me and paying for my travel expenses, and the McCormick Foundation for funding these workshops. The Seattle Times for giving me Friday to fly to Chicago. Lorene Yue for organizing the dinner. The journalists who gave up their weekend to learn how they can serve their
community better.


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