May 19, 2012

Mentoring staff at Alexandra community newspaper

In June 2009 the Media Development and Diversity Agency (MDDA) commissioned frayintermedia to provide turnkey training and mentoring to the staff of Alex Pioneer, a start-up newspaper serving the Alexandra community.

We gave the staff of Alex Pioneer an intensive, week-long course on editorial and business skills. The training was followed by a five-month mentoring programme in which frayintermedia’s trainers made weekly visits to Alex Pioneer to assist the staff with all aspects of establishing a successful community newspaper.

Reporting the Pan African Parliament

On behalf of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) and the Pan African Parliament, frayintermedia conducted a half-day training course on 6 November 2009 for journalists covering the First Ordinary Session of the Second Pan African Parliament.

The training looked at the role of journalists in a democracy and approaches to parliamentary reporting. Its prime aim was to enhance understanding amongst participants of their role as watchdogs and shapers of public debate and opinion, and to promote professionalism and high standards of reporting in general and of parliamentary reporting in particular. Specific objectives were:

  • To equip participants with a sound understanding of the importance of accurate and probing reporting for the development of mature democracies
  • To provide insights into internationally recognised codes of conduct for journalists and thus promote professionalism and high standards of reporting
  • To analyse the importance and relevance of parliamentary reporting.

The workshop was attended by 10 journalists from 10 African countries and was conducted by Birgit Schwarz from frayintermedia in English and French.

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

RHVP fryintermedia logos

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:

ukaid_large

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

toplogos_fray_osf

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:

ukaid_large.png

Xenophobia, Diversity and Migration: Workshops in Affected Communities

toplogos_fray_osf

Two-day workshops will be held in four townships in Gauteng that have experienced xenophobic violence (and have a strong community media presence) during September 2009. Experienced journalism practitioners will train 10 community community journalists at each workshop and give them a better understanding of migration issues and the media’s role in conflict prevention. The second day includes a short field trip in the affected community and guidance on producing a story.
The workshops will:
  • Assist the media to understand the different categories of migrants, the various aspects of migration, and the rights and responsibilities of migrants;
  • Promote responsible and factual reporting about migrants and migration, through proper investigation;
  • Strive to reduce the prejudices and stereotypes that are fostered by media reporting that tends to refer to all migrants as “illegal immigrants”; and
  • Provide journalists with skills and knowledge.
The workshops will happen on:
  • 14 – 15 September, Soshanguve, Atteridgeville, Pretoria
  • 17 – 18 September, Ramaphosa,Tembisa, Primrose, Johannesburg
  • 21 – 22 September, Cleveland/Jeppestown/Denver, Johannesburg
  • 29 – 30 September, Soweto, Johannesburg
Journalists receive mentoring for a month

All participants will be expected to produce one model story for publication or broadcast at the end of the workshop. Post-workshop individual mentoring for a month will ensure that the learning is sustained. All participants will be issued with certificates of attendance and completion.

Ten journalists selected per workshop

Only 10 participants will be selected for each workshop so it is advisable to apply now. The workshop is free, but participants will have to arrange their own transport to the training venues

frayintermedia organizes the workshops, in partnership with the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa (Cormsa), the Wits Forced Migration Studies Programme (FMSP) and Media Monitoring Africa (MMA), funded by the Open Society Foundation for South Africa (OSF).
See the workshop programme

here for the two-day workshops.

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. Click here for a copy.

The workshops are offered in partnership with:

bottomlogos_FMSP_MMA_CORMSA

Covering Diversity, Migration and Development

In August 2009, frayintermedia, the International Organization for Migration, the Consortium for Refugees and Migrants in South Africa, the Wits Forced Migration Studies Programme and Media Monitoring Africa launched a series of pilot training workshops on “Covering Diversity, Migration and Development” in Johannesburg, Polokwane and Lusaka.

South Africa’s social and economic landscape has changed dramatically since the first democratic election in 1994. As townships have become primary destinations for migrants from around the country and abroad, we have seen how quickly and devastatingly frustrations and anger can be re-channelled from service-delivery protests into anti-foreigner, anti-outsider killing sprees.

Read more about the workshops here.

Zambian journalism has come a long way

this-mrs-mirriam-zimba

 Miriam Zimba of the Times of Zambia gives her insight into the state of Zambian Journalism and the challenges faced by women journalists in her country.

1. What is the state of press freedom in your country?

The battle for press freedom in Zambia has come a long way and we have now reached a pinnacle where we can safely say the media in Zambia is enjoying relative freedom.
Having practised as a journalist for 19  years starting in the so called dark days of the one party state when privately run newspapers or broadcast stations were not allowed, to this point when the airwaves have been liberalised and privately run newspapers are flourishing, I can say the media in my country has come of age. The fact that privately owned newspapers and television stations and community radio stations are allowed to publish and broadcast without inhibition speaks of the extent to which the present government which ushered in multiparty politics is willing to let democracy flourish.  For you cannot talk of a true democracy without a free press.
However, despite these milestones, more still remains to be done to firmly entrench press freedom.  We still have laws in place that impinge on press freedom such as criminal libel for which a convicted journalist can go to jail. Criminal libel should be repealed and libel should only be a civil matter attracting a fine.  The freedom of Information Bill which has been debated for too long needs to be enacted into law to allow journalists access to information.  We also hope the new constitution will enshrine freedom of the press unlike now when it is interpreted as part of the clause on freedom of expression which is totally different from the former.

2.What are the biggest challenges for women journalists in your country?

Journalism is still male dominated and the ladder for upward mobility for female journalists is still steep. There are reasons for this and  one of them is motherhood which costs women’s progression.  The maternity leave periods are enough excuse for bosses(who are men in most cases) to by pass a woman for promotion in preference to a male colleague.  By the time maternity leave is over, the male colleague will have moved a step ahead.
However I must say female journalists are being recognised for their perseverance as seen in an increase in the number of women editors heading desks although we are yet to see a woman head a media organisation.’

3. How do you and other women journalists face the challenges?

They say if you cannot beat them, join them and that is what most of us are doing. Some beats like covering disaters, riots, football matches which were seen as too musculine  are being covered side by side with the male counterparts.  Women have become more assertive hence the increase in number of editors thanks to the women’s movement in the country which has helped women believe in themselves.  The important thing however is for women to tackle hard tasks while still retaining their femininity.

This interview forms part of the IWMF Network Voices series.

Deputy Science minister to kick-off dynamic conference

hanekom_derek

The Deputy Minister for the Department of Science and Technology, Mr Derek Hanekom, will open the Reporting Science Conference, taking place on 10-11 November 2008 in Johannesburg.

Bob Scholes  a leader of the ecosystem processes and dynamics research group, and a Fellow of the CSIR will be the keynote speaker at the second Reporting Science Conference which will host a number of local experts in the fields of Nanotechnology, Climate Change, Alternative Energy, Food Security and Astronomy and Space Science.

Science reporting is a research-intensive skill that sets journalists apart and has unlimited potential in the world of news.

The conference will strive to  equip journalists and science communicators with information and skills to analyse and make sense of available scientific information allowing them to report on and communicate from a knowledgeable basis.

A cocktail function will take place at the Observatory on Monday 10th  with a finger supper and Ubom Industrial Theatre performance.  Transport will be provided from the conference venue to the Observatory for all delegates.

For the latest conference programme, click here.

Date: 10 & 11 November 2008
Venue: HackleBrooke Estate, Craighall Park, Johannesburg
Cost: R 1938 (incl VAT)
For more information contact Debby Kramer on 011 341 0767 or email dkramer@frayintermedia.com

Making Science headlines

science-conference

10th -11th NOVEMBER 2008
Science reporting is a research-intensive skill that sets journalists apart and is a niche which has unlimited potential in the world of news. But, with a shortage of well informed and trained science journalists, many important science stories are going untold.
Scientists and journalists, it seems, are speaking different languages.
[Read more...]

Shaping the African media landscape in 2008

frayintermedia is not just shaping the media landscape in South Africa but also in Africa.

This follows the awarding of the second phase of the The Agriculture, Rural Development and Women (IWMF) project to the company.

A four-year initiative to work with news media organisations in Africa to enhance the coverage of agriculture, rural development and women on the continent, will see frayintermedia travelling to countries such as Mali, Uganda and Zambia to identify and train media trainers while also establishing centres of excellence.

“The main objective of the project is to incorporate women’s roles, stories, needs and solutions in the coverage of agriculture and rural economies whilst developing gender equality in newsrooms,” said Michae Schmidt, frayintermedia Civil Society Outreach Manager.

frayintermedia were responsible for the first phase of the project which was concluded earlier this year.