In an era marked by growing skepticism and waning public confidence, journalism as a profession stands at a crossroads, challenged by a pressing need to reclaim its trustworthiness and societal significance. A groundbreaking study spanning six diverse states in the United States offers a compelling intervention to this crisis. Through an innovative curriculum integrating student journalists directly with marginalized communities, the research reveals how structured, facilitated conversations can rebuild trust and revitalize the democratic role of news media.
The initiative, spearheaded by a coalition of academic researchers and practitioners, pivots from conventional journalism education models that prioritize technical skills and prescriptive reporting assignments. Instead, it immerses students within communities often sidelined or homogenized in mainstream media narratives—groups including the unhoused, LGBTQ individuals, people with disabilities, and Black and Latino populations. Starting from the lived experiences and articulated concerns of these communities, the program fosters an empathetic and reciprocal approach to journalism.
Developed initially in 2021 by Sue Robinson at the University of Wisconsin, the syllabus centers on conversation facilitation techniques designed to elicit authentic dialogue. This departure from rigid, predefined interview scripts empowers sources to identify issues most relevant to them, thereby dismantling extractive reporting practices that have long pervaded journalism. By sharing informational control with community members, students learn to balance the roles of listener, investigator, and storyteller, which enhances both the quality and equity of news coverage.
Margarita Orozco, assistant professor of journalism and mass communications at the University of Kansas and a key author of the study, emphasizes the pedagogical shift embodied by this curriculum. Traditional journalism courses often task students with proposing topics for stories without grounding these in community input. Here, the process is inverted; students first engage meaningfully with communities, cultivating trust and collaborative inquiry before pursuing journalistic output. This experiential learning model not only hones critical soft skills but also respectful, context-aware reporting.
Empirical evidence from the intervention attests to its efficacy. Across California, Oregon, Texas, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Arizona, the program facilitated 27 in-depth conversations between 87 student journalists and 135 community participants, culminating in 16 published stories that resonate with community priorities. The breadth and depth of participation underscore the scalability and adaptability of the curriculum for diverse local contexts and media environments.
Technology and specialized training supported by Cortico’s Local Voices Network played an instrumental role in equipping both students and educators to manage and analyze these deliberative dialogues. Media partners actively collaborated to produce journalistic content that reflects community insights, while also contributing to a dynamic repository of curricular materials. These resources enable journalism schools to effectively recruit participants, design immersive assignments, and offer targeted lectures that integrate theory and practice.
A notable outcome of the study is the critical reflection on journalistic norms concerning inquiry methodology. For instance, students engaging with immigrant populations initially anticipated immigration policy as a focal topic. Contrarily, community members highlighted concerns related to healthcare access, specifically insurance and affordable medical care, illustrating the pitfalls of assumption-driven reporting. This underscores the importance of adaptive listening in capturing the multi-dimensional realities of underrepresented groups.
This dialogic approach generates narratives that transcend problem-centric frames, instead foregrounding community-generated solutions and collective agency. Such elevated storytelling fosters a more nuanced, constructive discourse, which is vital for journalism’s democratic function. As Orozco articulates, these stories offer strategies and perspectives that traditional journalism often overlooks, positioning the medium as a platform for civic empowerment rather than mere critique.
The scholarly work, co-authored by Robinson, Orozco, and Lori Shontz at the University of Oregon, further situates the curriculum within the broader evolution of journalism education. Historically rooted in apprenticeship and practical craft training, the field has progressively embraced theoretical inquiry and recognition of journalism as a form of knowledge production. This study advocates for integrating critical thinking, an ethic of social responsibility, and an explicit awareness of journalism’s role in sustaining democratic societies.
Quantitative feedback from students post-course illuminates profound attitudinal shifts: 91% reported reconsidering the relational dynamics between journalists and community members, while 82% acknowledged a transformed understanding of journalism’s relevance to democratic vitality. These findings suggest that experiential curricula can significantly reorient future journalists toward a more engaged and socially conscious practice.
The timing of this curricular innovation is especially consequential given the contemporary media landscape and the digital upbringing of many young journalists. With pandemic-induced virtual learning exacerbating obstacles to in-person engagement, many students face challenges in cultivating interviewing skills, sourcing diverse voices, and developing direct interpersonal connections essential for trustworthy reporting. Conversation facilitation training addresses these gaps by fostering adaptive communication competencies.
Practical recommendations emerging from the study provide a roadmap for journalism educators seeking to implement similar programs. These include strategies for inclusive participant recruitment, thorough preparation of facilitators, transparent communication of course objectives, and revised evaluation criteria that prioritize collaborative and ethical journalistic processes. The study thus transcends theoretical contribution by offering pragmatic design principles for effective pedagogy.
In closing, as highlighted by Orozco, journalism education must parallel disciplines like medicine, law, and education, where immersive experiential training—whether hospital rotations, moot courts, or student teaching—is integral. For journalism to regain its social contract and enhance democratic discourse, students must break free from academic insularity and engage directly with communities. This reimagined curriculum demonstrates that through genuine conversation and shared storytelling power, journalism can reclaim its indispensable role in society.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Creating a Conversation Facilitation Curriculum for Journalism Schools
News Publication Date: 27-Nov-2025
Web References: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17512786.2025.2594653
Keywords: Mass media, Communication skills, Science communication, Social sciences, Written communication, Demography, Education, Educational methods, Students, College students

