Local that Works spotlights innovative and replicable content, engagement and revenue initiatives at public radio and TV stations and nonprofit and digital news organizations in the U.S. LTW includes an annual contest and a database (below). LTW produces webinars that offer insights into projects and organizations that are reshaping local civic journalism.
Explore the database of 635 Local that Works projects. Check out Local that Works contest Winners, Finalists and Semifinalists by clicking on those colored tags.
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113 results found.
Drawn In Pilot Initiative
Nine PBSTo close the literacy gap for BIPOC kids, Nine PBS partnered with Lion Forge Animation to develop the Drawn In Pilot Initiative featuring animated videos, comics, web games, and community sessions.
Black Arts Legacies
CrosscutBlack Arts Legacies is a new multimedia website highlighting the impact of Black artists in Seattle past and present. Season 1 celebrates 26 artists in written profiles, videos, a podcast and photos.
Bay Area News Collective: A Seven-Newsroom Collaboration to Assess the Geographic Representation of Local News
Bay City News FoundationBay Area News Collective is a collaboration to assess the geographic diversity and density of Bay Area news through analysis of geolocated news coverage and personal experiences in the community.
Santa Cruz Local’s Solutions to Homelessness Series
Santa Cruz LocalSanta Cruz Local investigates what’s being done to address homelessness in Santa Cruz County. We look at programs that have shown promise at addressing homelessness in other parts of California.
Ogden Listening Tour
KUERThe “Ogden Listening Tour” informs KUER on how to 1) Increase coverage of a geographic area, 2) Increase listenership, and 3) Connect with a diverse population
Safe Haven: Louisiana’s Green Book
Louisiana Public BroadcastingThe historic Green Book inspired LPB’s Safe Haven: Louisiana’s Green Book, a multimedia digital first series focusing on the businesses & places African Americans turned to during the Jim Crow era.
Minnehistories
TPT - Twin Cities PBSMinnehistories are bite-sized videos that share pieces of Minnesota history and allow the audience to reminisce or learn about an unfamiliar event, figure, or place in Minnesota history.
Peachtree & Pine: Where is Home? The Atlanta Homeless Project
The Atlanta VoiceThis is a docuseries conducted by The Atlanta Voice to explore, reveal and give voice to Atlanta’s homeless population.
News, Brews & Beatz: What Champaign-Urbana is Doing to Combat Gun Violence
Illinois Public Media at The University of Illinois Urbana ChampaignA panel discussion of African American experts addressing what Champaign-Urbana is doing to combat gun violence. This in-person, and FB Live series also features a poet, DJ and speed painter.
21
NJ PBSA documentary short film project highlighting difference makers in each of the 21 counties in New Jersey
Inaugural KMFA Draylen Mason Composer-in-Residence
KMFA Classical 89.5An new annual project commissioning music for radio from composers in underrepresented communities. KMFA’s inaugural composer is Texas native Quinn Mason, who is writing three new pieces for radio.
AAPI Advisory Committee – Telling Stories from Metro Detroit’s Asian American Communities
Detroit Public TelevisionDetroit Public TV is giving a platform for stories from Southeast Michigan’s AAPI communities. By working directly with the community, we’re helping tell these stories with nuance and intentionality.
Accountability in Glynn County, Georgia
The Current GAThe Current sparked police accountability in Brunswick, GA after Ahmaud Arbery’s murder with an investigative project that showed a pattern of implicit bias against Black residents by law enforcement.
A People’s History of Kansas City
KCUR 89.3“A People’s History of Kansas City” is an award-winning narrative history podcast about the everyday heroes who shaped the region. It centers the stories that have too often been forgotten or ignored.
Buffalo, What’s Next?
Buffalo Toronto Public Media“Buffalo What’s Next?” is a program created after a white supremacist killed 10 in a mass shooting on Buffalo’s mostly Black East side. It concentrates on difficult talk about segregation and race.
Powerful Stories: How Student Journalists Amplify Community Voices
Amplify UtahA great story needs to be shared. Amplify Utah finds, supports and showcases diverse voices in collaboration with young journalists, local media, and nonprofit partners and the communities they serve.
Palmetto Perspectives
South Carolina ETVPalmetto Perspectives aims to bring together a diverse group of voices to discuss the critical issues facing South Carolina and its communities while engaging viewers throughout the state.
Documented Semanal
DocumentedDocumented Semanal is a newsletter serving Spanish-speaking immigrant communities in New York, and allowing them to participate in the making of journalism on the most pressing issues affecting them.
Basketball Park Takeover
The Kansas City DefenderWe hosted a Basketball Park Takeover which attracted over 200 Black youth ages 15-24, to establish trust and awareness of The Kansas City Defender. Numerous attendants are now regular readers.
Yellowhammer History Hunt
Alabama Public TelevisionYellowhammer History Hunt is a digital series that takes viewers on a journey through Alabama’s past, exploring the places and people that define Alabama. Includes corresponding educational materials.
Drawn In Pilot Initiative
[email protected]
https://drawnin.org/
The latest Common Sense Media report shared that 75% of Black parents felt it is important that their kids see people of their ethnicity-race in kid’s media (2021). Still, white characters made up 65% of human characters on kids TV in 2017 (Center for Scholars and Storytellers, 2019). In addition, our region’s literacy outcomes are critically inequitable—with 75% of St. Louis Black third graders not reading on grade level compared to 35% of their white peers (St. Louis American, 2022). Diverse, highly engaging content has the power to improve school proficiency. For example, kids who read comics are more likely to read a full grade level higher than other children (Krashen, 2004).
To address this gap in content and literacy, Nine PBS partnered with Oscar-winning, Black-led, and local studio, Lion Forge Animation, to develop the Drawn In Pilot Initiative featuring animated shorts, comics, web experiences, and community sessions for kids ages 5-8 to improve grade-level fluency.
Drawn In is a series of epic adventure stories set in a bustling Midwest city, following four BIPOC kids—Tyler Agbani, Nevaeh Campbell, Jadyn Harris, and Yeong-Ja “Grace” Park—who love comic books. In every episode and comic, their real world collides with characters from the comic world, and the kids must catch and restore them to save the city from cartoon mayhem.
Drawn In is unique for its community-based approach, implementing our Model for Community Engagement. As part of this continual feedback loop, St. Louis families, educators, and community leaders review scripts and character renderings, and offer input that has resulted in character and setting design changes. As such, Drawn In reflects a story unique to St. Louis that will resonate with communities nationwide.
Our Literacy Power Hour series has already begun to see impact in the community. Held over eight weeks in partnership with four community sites serving BIPOC families and low-income neighborhoods, the series has engaged 39 families and 53 kids around Drawn In comics to create their own stories. As a result, 82% of caregivers agreed that the series helped them learn about their children, and 84% of children reported being excited to watch future Drawn In episodes.
With Drawn In, Nine PBS has created a model for co-developing culturally responsive and diversely representative content in a way that champions community strengths and empowers families and educators as co-creators of the content they want to see.
Nine PBS is excited and proud to share that the Drawn In Initiative has had a positive impact on families and kids by bringing culturally representative and responsive, highly engaging content to the young learners in our region who need it the most.
To measure Drawn In’s initial impact, surveys were distributed at final Literacy Power Hour sessions and completed by 31 children ages 4 to 13 (with help from caregivers) and by 22 caregivers. These families represented 14 zip codes across the area, with over 90% of families not missing a single session. Ninety-seven percent of children “liked” the comics, indicating they were interesting, exciting, fun, and cool. They also indicated that they are looking forward to watching Drawn In animation on TV, reading future comics, or reading them with their caregiver.
Caregivers indicated positive experiences for themselves and their children, with 85% agreeing they learned something about their children through the sessions. Caregivers also reported that their children “definitely”:
•looked forward to Power Hour sessions (86%),
•gained creative writing and/or storytelling skills (72%)
•had more confidence in sharing their creative work with others (68%)
•talked about their Drawn In activity stories at home (67%)
Drawn In offers ways for kids and parents to learn about each other.
“I learned more about the way she thinks about and understands stories and their elements. I learned to see things through her point of view.” – Parent
Nine PBS received support from CPB and the Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis to pilot this multimedia project, as well as from the Steward Family Foundation to support its community engagement activities, totaling $1.3M. At the pilot stage, revenue has not been a priority. Once the pilot content suite is completed in December 2022, Nine PBS will explore potential revenue streams to ensure our community continues to have free access to high-quality, representative early learning materials.