New portal to help citizens create community news websites

A free web portal to help both citizens and journalists create and responsibly operate community news sites launched Monday with an array of learning and resource modules contributed by a network of participants.

The Knight Citizen News Network (KCNN) seeks to help build capacity for citizens who want to start their own news ventures and to open the doors to citizen participation for traditional news organisations seeking to embrace user-generated content.

The Knight Citizen News Network (KCNN) was created to help citizens use digital media in ways that enrich community, enhance public discourse and enliven democracy, said Jan Schaffer, director of J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism, which manages development of the site. The site, www.kcnn.org, also seeks to open doors for traditional news organizations seeking to embrace user-generated content.

The network seeks to help build capacity for citizens who want to start their own news ventures and to open the doors to citizen participation for traditional news organisations seeking to embrace user-generated content. “Above all, the site seeks to impart an understanding of the qualities that make for responsible and credible community news and information,” said Schaffer.

Among the site’s initial offerings are:

  • A database of US citizen media sites, searchable by keyword, town or state and displayed on a Google map.
  • A “Things We Like” feature, starting with more than 20 “cool” ideas from sites around the country.
  • An interactive overview of the “Principles of Citizen Journalism,” with more than 40 audio and video interviews and scores of resources.
  • The latest citizen media research.
  • Mini case studies on how to train citizen journalists.
  • A list of resources to jumpstart reporting.

Significant content for the site has been developed by the ‘I, Reporter’ team of Amy Gahran and Adam Glenn, and by the Centre for Citizen Media, its founder Dan Gillmor with citizen media expert JD Lasica, who have captured the advice and thinking of some of the leading digital media figures in the US.

More modules are in the works, an official release said, and J-Lab has extended an invitation to new participants to propose content that would teach technical skills as well as core journalism values of accuracy, fairness and context.

The site and development of the modules are supported by a grant from the John S and James L Knight Foundation. “Legendary journalist John S Knight believed that the role of a good newspaper was ‘to bestir the people into an awareness of their own condition, provide inspiration for their thoughts and rouse them to pursue their true interests,’” said Knight journalism programme officer Gary Kebbel. “In the world of digital media, that lofty charge falls to each of us.”

J-Lab, a centre of the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, also administers the Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism. It offers micro grants for citizen media start-ups through its New Voices program. And it offers tutorials on how to use software and hardware to embark on community publishing at www.J-Learning.org.

The John S and James L Knight Foundation promotes excellence in journalism worldwide and invests in the vitality of 26 US communities where the Knight brothers owned newspapers. The Knight Foundation especially supports ideas and projects that create transformational change.

Date Posted: 27 March 2007 Last Modified: 27 March 2007