Thursday, May 31, 2018 For more than 30 years, the Paul Miller Washington Reporting Fellowship has introduced promising young(ish) reporters to D.C. From September to June, this one-day-a-month fellowship will give print, online and broadcast journalists from top news organizations an intensive overview of reporting in the capital. The Washington media landscape is filled with proud Paul Miller alumni. You can join their ranks. Application deadline: July 6 Live Webinars in JuneWhat’s Next in Artificial Intelligence?Tues., June 19 | 1 p.m. EDTREGISTERMan versus machines? Or is it man and machines? We’ll help you understand AI and how it works, offer up examples of everyday applications of AI, discuss how the workforce will change with AI, and look at what’s coming next in this rapidly changing science. Speaker: Daniel Castro, director, Center for Data Innovation, and vice president Information Technology and Innovation Foundation. More speakers TBA. This webinar is sponsored by IBM. How to Keep Sexual Harassment Out of Your NewsroomTues., June 26 | 2 p.m. EDTREGISTERHow can newsroom leaders foster a convivial newsroom environment without giving license to harassers and predators? Speakers: Loren Mayor, chief operating officer, NPR; and Joanne Lipman, former editor in chief of USA Today and author of “That’s What She Said: What Men Need to Know (and Women Need to Tell Them) About Working Together” Reporting on TraumaJohn Schmid (left) of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel won this year’s Carolyn C. Mattingly Award for Mental Health Reporting. (Rich Mattingly is pictured on right.) Schmid’s reporting illustrated the mental health aspects of living in poverty generation after generation. In this video, Schmid discusses how his work evolved from economics to neuroscience. Fellows Chosen for Oceans and Fisheries TrainingOver five days in July, these journalists will learn about commercial versus recreational fishing rights; innovations in fisheries management; regulation and labeling of domestic and imported fish; natural and man-made threats to the oceans; international laws and disputes; and marine biodiversity. NPF Friends & FellowsMental Health In The Workplace: A Call To Action | Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine In The Addiction Battle, Is Forced Rehab The Solution? | Phil Marcelo | The Associated Press | Opioids 2018 ‘Some People play Golf Or Tennis. I Do Stone Walls.’ | Robert Weisman | The Boston Globe | Working Longer 2018 Drawing On Historical Strengths To Prevent Problems In The Future | Anne Hillman | Alaska Public Radio | Mental Health 2016
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