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With interest costs outpacing defense spending, this piece will help journalists understand the public debt and explain it to ...
Journalists and public health experts share strategies for building trust, using careful language and improving coverage of health misinformation during a workshop at the AHCJ annual conference.
Journalists can use these 10 tools to examine education data in areas such as student achievement, school segregation and ...
She joined The Journalist’s Resource in 2015 after working as a reporter for newspapers and radio stations in the U.S. and Central America, including the Orlando Sentinel and Philadelphia Inquirer.Her ...
The Children’s Health Insurance Program, or CHIP, is an affiliated Medicaid program that covers children in families with incomes too high to qualify for Medicaid, but too low to afford private ...
A narrative began to take hold across the news industry in 2023: AI could free up journalists stuck performing mundane or rudimentary tasks, such as parsing information from police blotters, to focus ...
A recent systematic review and meta-analysis of dozens of studies suggests that more exposure to fluoride may be linked to lower intelligence scores in children, adding to the ongoing debates over ...
She joined The Journalist’s Resource in 2015 after working as a reporter for newspapers and radio stations in the U.S. and Central America, including the Orlando Sentinel and Philadelphia Inquirer.Her ...
If you report on US colleges and universities, get to know these 19 higher education databases. We spotlight free databases journalists can use to report on higher education issues ranging from the ...
She joined The Journalist’s Resource in 2015 after working as a reporter for newspapers and radio stations in the U.S. and Central America, including the Orlando Sentinel and Philadelphia Inquirer.Her ...
Do child access prevention laws prevent gun violence? Here’s what the research says. We look at what the research says about whether child access prevention laws, which are meant to keep firearms away ...
In the mid-1990s, Arizona State University political scientist Kim Fridkin dubbed U.S. press coverage of male and female candidates vying for state office a “distorted mirror” marked by gender bias ...
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