Initiative

Student Media Challenge

Student newsrooms across the United States are covering problem-solving efforts in their communities.

Students talk during a school fair

Students Serving Students

College journalists in California are living up to the steep challenges of reporting on mental health. This documentary video highlights Student Media Challenge projects on mental health mounted in the 2023-24 academic year by Pepperdine University, Fresno State University and Dimelo, the student-staffed bilingual news service at the University of Southern California.

Featuring interviews with student reporters and editors, along with faculty advisers from Fresno State and Pepperdine, the video captures some of what it took to complete stories on climate anxiety, cultural barriers to seeking counseling and a suicide scourge among young Latinas.

"A Part of What's Going Right": How Solutions Journalism Changed a Student Newsroom

The University of Georgia's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication took on a unique assignment during the 2022-23 academic year: not just covering how local communities are addressing problems, but saving a cherished local paper in the process.

Launched in 2022, the Student Media Challenge adds to SJN’s ongoing work with colleges and universities, as the number and kind of solutions journalism courses expand at both the undergraduate and graduate levels.

Now in its third year, the Challenge has evolved into an incubator of solutions journalism, awarding grants to student newsrooms to pursue projects of their own imaginings. To date, cohort members have used the funds to:

  • Support an award-winning podcast on food insecurity
  • Address news deserts in rural communities in Missouri
  • Fortify news coverage for a once-endangered weekly in Georgia

Student media outlets are playing an increasing role in rebuilding local news ecosystems. As more local communities grapple with becoming news deserts, student newsrooms are stepping forward to assume a leadership role in informing the public about news, on campus and well beyond. With solutions journalism training, students are covering social issues more deeply and equitably, as well as gaining valuable experience for internships and jobs.
 

2024-25 Academic Year Cohort

  • Baltimore Watchdog (Towson University)
  • Capital News Service (University of Maryland)
  • Long Beach Current (Cal State-Long Beach)
  • Hilltop Views (St. Edward's University)
  • Stanford Daily (Stanford University)
  • The Tiger's Roar (Savannah State University)
  • University of Tennessee-Chattanooga
  • The Temple News (Temple University)
A sign at a campus event describes ways to reduce stress. Photo by Jacqueline Carrillo/The Collegian.

2023-24 Academic Year Cohort

  • Chronicle (Columbia College)
  • The Daily Tar Heel (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
  • The Collegian (Fresno State University)
  • Dimelo (University of Southern California)
  • North Carolina A&T University
  • Pepperdine University
  • Stony Brook University
  • The Triangle (Drexel University)

Pictured: Fresno State hosts a campus event spotlighting its solutions-focused mental health work while giving the community a chance to destress before finals. Photo by Jacqueline Carrillo for The Collegian

Anna Lionas, host of The Food Fix podcast at Michigan State University, uses Solutions Journalism concepts to report "how to better feed the world."

2022-23 Academic Year Cohort

  • Díg en Español (Santa Ana College)
  • el Don (California State University at Long Beach)
  • Howard University News Wire
  • Knight Center for Environmental Journalism (Michigan State University)
  • KOMU (University of Missouri)
  • Oglethorpe Echo (University of Georgia)
  • Queens University News Service
  • Washington State University

Pictured: Anna Lionas hosts "The Food Fix" podcast at Michigan State University. Photo courtesy of MSU Knight Center for Environmental Journalism