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The 2025 Freelance Fellowship Recipients

Behind the Story: How Kent State tracked student athletes missing class

By Alena Rehberger | August 28, 2014

By Karl Idsvoog, Kent State University How do you get into college if you can only read at a grade-school level? Last January, CNN’s Sara Ganim answered that question in a powerful piece of reporting. In a few short sentences Sara personalized the reality of college athletics at the University of North Carolina as she told…

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How to survive your first CAR story

By Alena Rehberger | August 27, 2014

By Jennifer Johnson, The Grand Forks Herald Spreadsheet programs like Excel have always intimidated me. Sure, I dabbled in them a few times. I pulled up pre-formatted sheets and leafed through them. I used basic formulas and figured out percentages. And I also attended a two-day IRE training with fellow reporters at the Grand Forks…

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IRE Radio Podcast | Beyond Breaking News

By Alena Rehberger | August 22, 2014

When a story breaks, speed is key. But so are depth, context and accuracy. So how do you cover the news while simultaneously digging deeper? This week we’re talking about investigating breaking news. Our speakers will cover everything from identifying sources on the scene to developing a plan for watchdog coverage. Here’s the lineup: Scott…

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Mark your calendar for the IRE Chicago Meetup next month

By Alena Rehberger | August 15, 2014

The IRE Chicago Meetup crew is partnering with the Chicago Headline Club for its next happy hour. The Chicago Headline Club holds Burger Nights every month, and the next one is Sept. 12 at The Billy Goat (430 N. Michigan Ave). So, bring a colleague to introduce to the Investigative Reporters and Editors community and…

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Submit session, speaker ideas for NICAR15 in Atlanta

By Alena Rehberger | August 15, 2014

We’re gearing up for our annual data journalism conference March 5-8 in Atlanta and want your input to make this the best NICAR yet. We’re accepting session and speaker ideas through September 12. Please submit your ideas using the link below. If you’d rather send them via email, please use confideas@ire.org. Thanks to all of you who’ve submitted ideas and…

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Do police have to release the name of the officer involved in the Ferguson, Mo. shooting?

By Alena Rehberger | August 14, 2014

We’ve been getting a lot of questions about the Ferguson, Missouri police department’s decision not to release the name of the officer involved in the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Mike Brown. To get some legal answers, we turned to professor Sandy Davidson, who teaches communications law at the Missouri School of Journalism.  Here’s what you…

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AUDIO: The FERPA exception every reporter should know

By Alena Rehberger | August 13, 2014

Sexual assault cases are never easy to cover, and when a university is involved, the challenges become even greater. Victims are sometimes reluctant to talk. Administrators often refuse to do interviews, citing FERPA. But that doesn’t mean these cases are impossible to cover. At the IRE Conference in San Francisco this summer Walt Bogdanich of…

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Cuomo administration policy allows state to delete emails of government employees

By Alena Rehberger | August 13, 2014

According to WNYC, “New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s administration — which the governor pledged would be the most transparent in state history — has quietly adopted policies that allow it to purge the emails of tens of thousands of state employees, cutting off a key avenue for understanding and investigating state government.” “Last year,…

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IRE Radio Podcast | Building chemistry in your newsroom

By Alena Rehberger | August 8, 2014

A good reporter-editor relationship can make or break your investigative project. This week is all about building chemistry in the newsroom. Here’s the lineup: Alexandra Zayas and Chris Davis of the Tampa Bay Times talk about working together on the 2012 series “In God’s Name.” Alison Young and John Hillkirk of USA TODAY walk through…

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Behind the Story: High-stakes testing in Norwegian schools subject to corruption

By Alena Rehberger | July 31, 2014

By Shazia Sarwar A series of investigative reports by Verdens Gang (VG) in 2013 exposed that principals at all primary and secondary schools in Oslo, Norway’s capital, were given personal incentives and salary benefits in secret working contracts and on the basis of student results on national tests. The investigation found a significant correlation between…

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