A reporter discovers troubling gaps in the data collected by LA's child welfare agency on child removals due to neglect.
A reporter learned how to gather her own data as a building block for her narratives, which she brought to life through ...
San Diego County boasts roughly three water vending machines per 10,000 people — more than nearby Riverside, Orange and Los ...
We believe health is an essential part of every story. We believe impact reporting leads to healthier communities. We believe engagement and diversity enrich journalism. The Center for Health ...
Our California Fellowship is designed to support reporters in the Golden State pursuing ambitious, enterprising projects on overlooked health and health equity issues. You decide what stories need to ...
Our Data Fellowship offers journalists an opportunity to transform their reporting by training them to “interview the data” as if it were a human source. They finish the five-month program equipped ...
Our competitive Fellowship programs offer individualized mentorship, generous reporting stipends ranging from $2,000 to $10,000, and a week-long training institute that includes inspiring trips in the ...
Teena Apeles is the national engagement editor at the Center for Health Journalism at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Journalism. A native Angeleno, prior to joining the ...
Our National Fellowship helps journalists and their newsrooms report deeply and authoritatively on the health, welfare and well-being of children, families and communities. The program prepares ...
Growing up and reporting in California’s Central Valley, I would often hear about poor literacy. Public officials cite low adult literacy as an underlying condition that worsens employment, poverty, ...