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News
Release August
10, 2005
NLGJA
News > News Releases > August 10, 2005
NLGJA Announces the Leroy F. Aarons Journalism Education Program
SAN
ANTONIO, TX – The National Lesbian & Gay Journalists
Association (NLGJA) today launched
the Leroy F. Aarons Journalism Education
Program. The multi-faceted initiative
will continue and expand the education
work started by NLGJA founder Leroy
F. Aarons.
NLGJA made the announcement at the annual convention of the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) in
San Antonio.
“Roy
Aarons always believed that NLGJA’s goal of
fair and accurate coverage would be
realized by training young journalists
and students,” said
Pamela Strother, NLGJA’s
Executive Director. “The Aarons Program builds on his vision
and will help prepare tomorrow’s journalist to cover complex
issues of sexual orientation.”
The
Aarons Program brings together all of NLGJA’s education
efforts, including two new features:
The Educators Toolbox,
an online resource for educators who
want to include sexual orientation
issues in their curriculum; and the Leroy F. Aarons Scholarship
Award – NLGJA’s first scholarship.
Today’s
rollout at the AEJMC Convention was
highlighted by the official launch
of the Aarons Program’s
Web site portal. The Web site includes
the Educators Toolbox,
designed under the direction of Dr.
Dane Claussen, Point Park University
(Pittsburgh), and Barbara Raab of
NBC News. NLGJA plans to announce
details of the $5,000 Leroy F. Aarons
Scholarship at its 15th Anniversary
Celebration & Convention,
September 22-25, in Chicago.
Other initiatives in the Aarons Program include the NLGJA National
Convention Student Project and the NLGJA Excellence in Student
Journalism Award. All the resources are designed to provide tools
to educators and students and help them understand and cover the
complex and rapidly changing issues around sexual orientation,
media and society.
The
Aarons Program is NLGJA’s tribute to Roy Aarons, its
founder and a pioneering journalist,
who died November 28, 2004. The program
was conceived by former NLGJA presidents
Steven Petrow and Robert Dodge along
with Strother and NLGJA President
Eric Hegedus in San Francisco shortly
after Aarons’ death.
The meeting was organized by Petrow,
who drew the group together to design
an effort that would advance Aarons’ important work
in journalism education.
Petrow, senior vice president/editorial director of Waterfront
Media in Brooklyn, NY, and Dodge, a national correspondent in
the Washington Bureau of The Dallas Morning News, are serving
as the founding co-chairs of the Aarons Program.
“For the 15 years that I knew Roy, he continually emphasized
the importance of training the next generation of journalists,
LGBT and otherwise, about sexual orientation issues,” Petrow
said. “In the few short months since his passing, we’ve
gathered a first rate advisory board
for the program, which is such a testament to Roy and his vision.”
Dodge said the Aarons Program would help journalism
students prepare for their careers. “Journalism students start their
careers in a complex world and will quickly find out that diversity
issues are at the heart of social, political and economic developments,” Dodge
said. “It is important that young journalists are armed
with the best knowledge and skills – and the Aarons Program
will be an important ingredient in
their education.”
Aarons, a member of the faculty at the University
of Southern California Annenberg School for Communication, was
passionate
about training the next generation
of journalists and communications professionals. His contributions
at USC included a breakthrough
program called Sexual Orientation Issues
in the News. Aarons’ commitment
to bringing awareness of lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender issues to schools of journalism and
communications has dramatically
influenced coverage of those issues.
The Aarons Program is consistent with and designed, in part,
to help educators meet standards adopted by the Accrediting Council
on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEMJC) that
require colleges of journalism and mass communications to include
sexual orientation in their curricula. Many of the resources have
been developed with the help of faculty and scholars who are members
of the AEJMC.
Aarons, a former executive editor of The Oakland Tribune, founded
NLGJA in 1990 during a meeting with fellow journalists in his
living room. It has grown into an organization of 1,300 members
with 24 chapters nationwide. NLGJA plays a significant role in
improving the fairness and accuracy of coverage of the LGBT community
and in creating an equitable workplace for its members.
The
National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association (NLGJA)
is an organization of journalists,
media professionals, educators and
students who work within the news
industry to foster fair and accurate
coverage of lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender issues.
NLGJA opposes all forms of workplace
bias and provides professional
development to its members. Media Contacts:
Pamela Strother
Executive Director
Office: 202-588-9888, ext. 11
Mobile: 202-486-5990
pstrother@nlgja.org
Eric Hegedus
National President
Mobile: 215-840-3909
ehegedus@gmail.com
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