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Columbia University

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Columbia University s program in Earth & Environmental Science Journalism Kim Kastens (kastens_at_ldeo.columbia.edu) Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Columbia University


1
Columbia Universitysprogram in Earth
Environmental Science Journalism
  • Kim Kastens
  • (kastens_at_ldeo.columbia.edu)
  • Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
  • of Columbia University
  • Presentation to
  • SommerUSAademie 2005 Wissenschaftsjournalismus
  • 6 September 2005

2
Columbia Universitysprogram in Earth
Environmental Science Journalism
  1. Dual masters degree program for Columbia students
  2. Environmental journalists of color project, in
    collaboration with Society of Environmental
    Journalists

3
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Goal
  • . to train journalists who have both the
    scientific background and the communications
    skills to inform the public about discoveries,
    processes, insights, and controversies about the
    Earth and environment, in a manner that is
    simultaneously interesting and accurate.
  • (Clue articulate what you are trying to
    accomplish.)

4
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Co-sponsored by
  • Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
  • The Department of Earth Environmental Sciences
  • The Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
  • (Clue work with excellent partners.)

5
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Co-directed by
  • Kim Kastens (Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory)
  • Marguerite Holloway (Graduate School of
    Journalism)
  • (Clue tap multiple expertises)

6
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Prerequisites undergraduate background in
    science and demonstrated writing ability
  • Course of study
  • 2 semesters of coursework in Earth
    environmental science anchored by Case Studies
    in EESJ
  • science masters research project
  • 2 semesters of coursework and practical training
    in journalism
  • journalism masters project
  • Result
  •  MA in Earth Environmental Sciences
  • plus MS in Journalism
  • (Clue Be tough. Set high standards)

7
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • What we look for in applicants
  • Writing ability, via J-school writing test.
  • Basic science prerequisites, one college year
    with grade of B or better in 4 out of 5 of
  • Geosciences, Biological Sciences
  • Math, Physics, Chemistry
  • Commitment to communicating across interface
    between science and society.
  • worked at nature center, national park, science
    teacher
  • undergraduate double major science and
    language
  • student journalism
  • Avoid science wannabes
  • Interesting interview they ask us questions

(Clue Put a lot of energy into admissions
process. )
8
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Case Studies in Earth Environmental Science
    Journalism
  • read articles written for a technical audience
    about an issue, discovery or controversy
  • read articles written for a popular audience on
    the same topic
  • interview a scientist who worked on the topic
  • from this primary material, construct
    understanding of journalistic strategies and
    devices
  • 2004-2005 Sumatran tsunami, Teaching
    Creationism in public schools, Coral bleaching,
    Arsenic in groundwater of Bangladesh, Marine
    mammals sonars, California energy crisis, etc.

9
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • What is a science research project doing in a
    journalism education program, anyway?

10
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Some of the learning objectives for the EESJ
    science research project
  • Students will experience the process of finding
    a research question which is (a) unanswered, but
    (b) answerable.
  • Students will master skills or techniques of a
    subdiscipline of earth or environmental science,
    thus gaining an appreciation of research as a
    craft.
  •  Students will generate original data about the
    Earth or Environment, thus gaining some
    understanding of the ambiguities and
    complexities inherent in real data.
  • Students will generate logically-defensible
    interpretations from their data, and thus
    strengthen their ability to build a chain of
    logic from observation to interpretation, and
    from cause to effect.
  • Students will experience the state of mind
    that comes with total immersion in research, and
    thus come to recognize science as a creative
    endeavor.
  • Students will become a member of an active
    research group, and will feel the human dynamics
    of such a group.
  • Students will gain confidence in their ability
    to hold their own in the community of scientists.

11
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
12
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Columbia Graduate School of Journalism component
  • Environmental Reporting
  • Advanced Reporting Writing (RWI)
  • Skills of the Journalist
  • Masters' Project
  • Critical issues in journalism
  • Journalism, the law and society
  • Science Reporting and Writing
  • Media Workshop
  • Master's Project
  • Journalism Elective

13
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • Where do the graduates work?
  • Science-oriented publications
  • Scientific American, Geotimes, Discover
  • Environment-oriented publications
  • On Earth, Audubon
  • Mainstream Media
  • Houston Chronicle, New York Times, Wall Street
    Journal, Albuquerque Journal, Albany
    Times-Union
  • freelance
  • out of journalism
  • environmental consulting

14
(No Transcript)
15
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
Exemplary work In Harms Way by Dina
Cappiello, 1999 EESJ graduate, in Houston
Chronicle, 2005
16
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
Environmental Reporting
Science
17
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
UC Santa Cruz
mid-career (MBL, Metcalfe)
PhD or MD
journalism
Columbia EESJ
work
science Undergraduate
non-science
18
Columbia EESJ Masters Program
  • What I have learned about the overlapping values
    of scientists and journalists
  • curiosity
  • skepticism
  • ability to self-educate without a teacher
  • comfortable out of mainstream of society
  • search for truth

19
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
  • Goals
  • To increase the quality, accuracy and
    visibility of environmental journalism in media
    reaching people of color.
  • To increase knowledge of, and interest in, the
    Earth and environment among minorities
    underrepresented in the Geoscience workforce.
  • ______
  • Funded by National Science Foundation,
    Opportunities for the Enhancement of Diversity in
    the Geosciences program (2001-2005)

20
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
Hurricane Katrina victims were disproportionately
African-American.
because African-Americans in New Orleans are
more likely to live in poverty, and lack cars
because African-Americans were less well-informed
about natural hazards and environmental risks???
Hurricane Katrina victims, NY Times website
21
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
Did the warnings in the press miss them? If so,
what could journalists, journalism organizations,
or media organizations do?
22
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
  • Collaboration between Columbia/EESJ and
  • Society of Environmental Journalists
  • National Association of Black Journalists
  • Native American Journalists Association
  • National Hispanic Journalists Association

23
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
  • Fellowships for minority journalists to attend
    SEJ meetings
  • Co-organized sessions and field trips on
    environmental topics at NABJ, NAJA, and NAHJ
    meetings
  • Environmental category in journalism awards
    programs of minority journalism organizations

Brenda Box of WTOP-AM radio, Washington DC, ran a
conference mini-tour on the Bayou Savage National
Wildlife Refuge at the 2003 SEJ New Orleans
conference.
24
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
25
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
  • But maybe not as knowledgeable
  • In a survey of 808 undergraduates enrolled in an
    introductory environmental literacy course,
    Battles (2003) found
  • 38 of African-American/Blacks vs
  • 51 of Caucasians/Whites
  • agreed with the statement in general, I had a
    good understanding of environmental issues before
    I took this course,

African-Americans are as concerned about
environmental issues as European-Americans
(Mohai, 2003).
26
EESJ GeoDiversity Project
  • SEJ Minority Fellows tell us
  • Editors consider the environment a suburban or
    white beat and dont tend to assign journalists
    of color to cover environmental stories.
  • Editors think minority readers/viewers arent
    interested in environmental topics.
  • They work on tight deadlines without the time
    for investigations that environmental stories
    require.
  • They write for publications with small staffs,
    environment beat is rare, science beat unknown.
  • Miamis Hispanic communitylive in an
    information desert with respect to the
    environmental problems that affect their
    neighborhoods (Swafford, 1996).

27
For further information
  • Earth Environmental Science Journalism program
  • http//www.ldeo.columbia.edu/eesj/
  • Diversity in Environmental Journalism program
  • http//www.ldeo.columbia.edu/edu/eesj/sejweb/
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