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Learn about the European Youth Press (EYP) and their #ddjcamp initiative focused on data journalism skills for human rights storytelling, encouraging young journalists to engage in informed reporting. This dedicated training course equips participants with key journalistic competencies, promotes intercultural exchange, and emphasizes media responsibility.
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Presentation for the EPP/CoR Winter University for young media makers Brussels, 24.11.2016
Shortly about the EYP The European Youth Press (EYP) is an umbrella association of young media makers in Europe. It involves more than 60,000 journalistsand other media makers, and as a network has 27 member organisations.The EYP organises numerous international projects and events and publishes online Orange Magazine. The EYP has also MENA Committee.The activities are focused on: media literacy, quality in journalism, freedom of media, no hate speech, gender in media and reporting on minorities and migration.The aim of all member organisations and of the EYP is to inspire young people to become involved in the media and take an active part in civil society by fostering objective and independent media.
#ddjcamp - the background After various projects that were tackling different human rights dimensions, the EYP together with its Member Organisations has recognized a need to implement an activity for multipliers focused on providing them data journalism skills as a powerful tool for human rights storytelling.The specific objectives are as follows: 1. To improve the level of data journalism competences;2. To increase professional journalistic capacities;3. To reflect on migration, asylum seekers and refugees from different perspectives and raise awareness of existing biases;4. To promote synergies between the established media and early-in-career journalists;5. To develop participants' intercultural competences;6. To foster innovation and excellence in the media;7. To reflect on media responsibility;8. To create an international network.
#ddjcamp - the practicalities 7 days training course, 12. - 20.11.2016Venue: Berlin, GermanyWork methods: non-formal learning (seminars, workshops, presentations, panel discussions), intercultural exchange, group work, mutual learning and exchange of experiences, hands-on learning, production of media and educational materials, informal learningParticipating organisations were MO's of the EYP from the EU (8) and neighbouring countries (3)As a result, participants are able to act independetly and replicate the data-journalism techniques further in their career and to act as multipliers. The outcome of the training will be published in the national media outlets of different countries.http://www.youthpress.org/ddjcamp/
#ddjcamp – in numbers 7 days training course57 participants from 8 EU and 3 neighbouring countries12 reporting groups = 12 reportages3 field trips684 cups of coffee56 hours of sleep (average)
#ddjcamp - the programme Data Journalism as a contribution to migration debateOrganising data: sources and extraction, data scraping from pdf, web and images data search, setting a database; data cleaning.Analysing data: basic stats, finding trends, correlation-causation, data relations, exerciseMath for journalistsStorytelling with data and DatavisualisationGroup work and Peer-to-peer review; Open Collaborative SpaceVisit to FES, Die Zeit Online, Caritas and emergency shelter for refugees in Berlin
#ddjcamp – key presentations The Migrants Files - the human and financial cost of Fortress Europe by Nicolas Kayser-Bril (Journalism++)Protecting refugees by Martin Rentsch from UNHCRStorytelling with Data by Gianna Grün (Der Kontext)Data visualisation by Loïc Horellou (Haute École des Arts du Rhin à Strasbourg, SÿCLO)
#ddjcamp – reportages A European Map of violence against refugees and the new rightHow many people migrated to Europe for health reasonsRefugees’ employment in EU member statesMigration and violence - how the migrant crisis has influenced crime rates in EuropeDemographics - how many and where do migrants from former USSR countries migrate