May 19, 2012

frayintermedia’s Michael Schmidt advises the editor of a community newspaper in Alexandra 2009

2009 Michael Schmidt at Alex pioneer_CSC1907_400X300 96DPI JPG

2009 Michael Schmidt at Alex pioneer_CSC1907_400X300 96DPI JPG

Community journalists interview migrants during a field trip, on a 2-day training workshop 2009

Delegates preparing media strategies at a 5-day “Communicating Women’s Rights” workshop 2006

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2006 FHR Cape town_400X300 96DPI JPG

Press Ombudsman Joe Thloloe at a 2008 public Journalism Dialogue on media and poverty

Press Ombudsman Joe Thloloe at 2008 public Journalism Dialogue on "Does the media ignore the plight of the poor?"

Press Ombudsman Joe Thloloe at 2008 public Journalism Dialogue on "Does the media ignore the plight of the poor?"

Jan – Feb 2010 communication offer to NGO’s

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Looking to improve your written communication with stakeholders? We offer a turnkey service to produce brochures, “Year in Review” booklets, annual reports and NGO profiles.

NGO_materials

NGO_materials

Getting the message across during the Soccer World Cup

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frayintermedia will conduct a two-day media skills programme for GTZ in January 2010, including practical coaching on being interviewed for radio and television.

The massive global media coverage South Africa will receive during the 2010 Soccer World Cup will shape the world’s perceptions of the country and the continent with a lasting effect. Over a billion people in more than 200 countries are expected to simultaneously follow every event of the month-long tournament between the world’s top 32 soccer-playing nations.

The World Cup is thus a great opportunity for projects and organisations to showcase their initiatives and achievements. Knowing and understanding the media landscape will, however, be crucial for project leaders and communicators to get their message across in a way that will ensure their organisation’s future success.

The two-day course consists of a theoretical and a practical part.

Day One

aims at providing a better understanding of media landscapes, reporters’ needs and how newsrooms operate. The course will look at ways to engage the media successfully and address the issue of media laws and ethics and the interviewees’ own rights. It will furthermore provide participants with the necessary tools to formulate key messages, and to get these across convincingly in writing and on radio and TV.

Day Two

will focus on the practical application of all theoretical learning and provide participants with opportunities to handle different types of interview situations. The aim is for participants to gain confidence and become increasingly aware of the importance of self-conduct and speech patterns, in particular on camera.

Aim of this workshop

The overall course aims at enhancing the participants’ understanding of how the media in SA and Germany works and strives to empower communicators to handle media requirements in a professional manner, especially at a time of increased media interest and global focus on the country.

The client

The two-day training course frayintermedia will conduct on behalf of the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) will prepare team members and partners of the GTZ Youth Development Through Football (YDF) projects for the heightened 2010 media interest and help communicators to become successful ambassadors for the organization and its project activities.

Outcomes for the media training

By the end of the two-day course, participants are expected to:

  • Understand the local and the German media landscapes in terms of their reach and prime interests
  • Understand what makes news in local, regional, national and international media
  • Understand how newsrooms operate and therefore how media relations can help in terms of getting key message across;
  • Have gained basic communication skills necessary for the production of media tools and the handling of Q&As and media interviews.
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Malawi and Botswana workshops fully subscribed

[Read more...]

Biotechnology in Food Security – Media Round Table 29 Oct Pretoria


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Invite you to a media round table on

“The Role of Biotechnology in Food Security”

Is there enough food for the growing human population? Is genetic modification the solution and where do organics fit into the picture? Can your journalists write quickly and intelligently on these burning issues for their readers or audience?*

SCI-ENZA, University of Pretoria Hatfield Campus

Thursday 29 October 2009

TIME TOPIC

08:30 – 09:00

Tea and registration

09:00 – 09:15

Introduction to Biotechnology and Food Security
Sci-Enza facilitator: Janine Lazarus (Janinemedia)

09:15 – 09:35

“Genetically Modified Plants: Are They Natural, Are They Safe and Do We Need Them?”
Professor John Taylor (Food Science, University of Pretoria)

09:35 – 09:55

“Biotechnology and Food Security in a Changing Global Climate”
Prof Rachel Chikwamba (Centre for Scientific and Industrial Research)

09:55 – 10:15

“Climate Change and its Effects on Food Security”
Dr Jane Olwoch (Senior Lecturer, Environmental Science, University of Pretoria)

10:15 – 10:30

Tea Break

10:30 – 10:50

“Government Policy on Genetically Modified Organisms & Food Security”
Speaker from the Department of Agriculture (to be confirmed)

10:50 – 11:50

Panel Discussion

Prof John Taylor, Prof Rachel Chikwamba, Dr Jane Olwoch

11:50 onwards

Lunch & Networking

SAASTA and PUB Media Round Tables

This event forms part of a series presented by SAASTA and PUB. A previous media round table in August 2009 at Rhodes University focused on “Reporting Environmental Biotechnology

Map and directions

Find the University of Pretoria, Hatfield Campus on Google Maps. Get driving directions here.

The Registration Form

Display the registration form, fill it in and return it to Debbie Kramer at dkramer@frayintermedia.com or contact her at +27 11 341 0767

The workshops are offered in partnership with:

SCI-ENZA

Wetenskap in Aksie! Hand-on Science!

Dar es Salaam, 24-25 Nov 2009: Covering Poverty, Food Security and Social Protection

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Sign up your journalists to the Regional Hunger and Vulnerability Programme’s two-day training workshop. Prizes will be offered to the best report on the topic by participants in each country.

Food riots across Africa, sparked by the global economic crisis, have made food security the continent’s most pressing issue. Is your newsroom equipped to cover the issue quickly, intelligently and in depth? Africa is home to three-quarters of the world’s “ultra-poor”. Food aid may solve their immediate hunger, but longer-term solutions are needed to bolster food security.

The Workshop will be held in

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on Tuesday 24 and Wednesday 25 November 2009 at the Protea Hotel, Seaview Ocean Road, Dar es Salaam.

Programme Day 1
  • Introduction to covering poverty – plus film screening
  • Debate with local experts on how the Tanzanian media covers poverty
  • Introduction to the RHVP
  • A deeper look into poverty in Tanzania
  • Field trip: Guided tour of local anti-poverty project plus interview opportunities
Programme Day 2
  • Review of what was learned on the field trip
  • Generating poverty story ideas
  • Turning poverty story ideas into fully fledged story concepts
  • Planning stories on poverty
  • Sourcing information on poverty and poverty interventions
  • Interview with RHVP expert
Sponsorships available

The first 10 journalists signed up will be fully sponsored by RHVP. Fill in the registration form and send to Obakeng Mooke at omooke@frayintermedia.com

Cost to latecomers

Any others who wish to register thereafter will be charged TZS 105,088.

Prize for best story

The RHVP will adjudicate and grant a prize of TZS 715,000 to the journalist who writes the best story published or broadcast on the topic within a month of the workshop – and his or her news organisation will receive TZS 358,000. The RHVP’s decision on the winner is final.

Aim of this workshop

Covering Poverty, Food Security & Social Protection is an RHVP initiative, funded by the United Kingdom’s development agency, UKaid, and is aimed at increasing and enhancing news media coverage of poverty and poverty policy interventions in the Southern African Development Community region.

The Workshop Programme

Display the workshop programme, or download a Word copy to your computer.

The Registration Form

Please return the registration form to Obakeng Mooke on omooke@frayintermedia.com or contact her at +27 11 341 0767 to attend one of the workshops.

Display the form or download a Word copy to your computer.

The workshops are offered in partnership with:

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Lusaka, 10-11 Nov 2009: Covering Poverty, Food Security and Social Protection

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Food riots across Africa, sparked by the global economic crisis, have made food security the continent’s most pressing issue. Is your newsroom equipped to cover the issue quickly, intelligently and in depth? Africa is home to three-quarters of the world’s “ultra-poor”. Food aid may solve their immediate hunger, but longer-term solutions are needed to bolster food security.

Sign up your journalists to the Regional Hunger and Vulnerability Programme’s two-day training workshop. Prizes will be offered to the best report on the topic by participants in each country.

The first workshop will be held in Lusaka, Zambia

on Tuesday and Wednesday, 10-11 November 2009 at the Protea Hotel, Cairo Road, Lusaka, Zambia.

The workshops in

  • Tanzania (Tuesday and Wednesday 24-25 November 2009),
  • Botswana (Tuesday and Wednesday 19-20 January 2010) and
  • Malawi (Tuesday and Wednesday 26-27 January 2010)

have a similar programme, sponsorships and equivalent prize for the best story.

Programme Day 1:
  • Introduction to covering poverty – plus film screening
  • Debate with local experts on how the Zambian media covers poverty
  • Introduction to the RHVP
  • A deeper look into poverty in Zambia
  • Field trip: Guided tour of local anti-poverty project plus interview opportunities
Programme Day 2:
  • Review of what was learned on the field trip
  • Generating poverty story ideas
  • Turning poverty story ideas into fully-fledged story concepts
  • Planning stories on poverty
  • Sourcing information on poverty and poverty interventions
  • Interview with RHVP expert
Sponsorships available

The first 10 Zambian journalists signed up for the Lusaka workshop will be fully sponsored by RHVP. Fill in the registration form (available below) and send to Obakeng Mooke at omooke@frayintermedia.com

Cost of the Lusaka workshop

The registration fee for latecomers who did not receive sponsorship is ZMK 374,000 per person.

Prize for best Zambian story on Poverty, Food Security and Social Protection

The RHVP will adjudicate and grant a prize of ZMK 2,5-million to the journalist who writes the best story published or broadcast on the topic within a month of the workshop – and his or her news organisation will receive ZMK 1,26-million. The RHVP’s decision on the winner is final.

Covering Poverty, Food Security & Social Protection is an RHVP initiative, funded by the United Kingdom’s development agency, UKaid, and is aimed at increasing and enhancing news media coverage of poverty and poverty policy interventions in the Southern African Development Community region.

See the workshop programme

here for the two-day workshop.

Please return the registration form

to Obakeng Mooke on omooke@frayintermedia.com or fax number +27 11 325 2631 or contact her at +27 11 341 0767 to attend.

If you will email the registration form, click here to download a Microsoft Word copy to your computer.

If you will fax the form, click here to display it.

The workshop is funded by:

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