Chronic Illness, Tips
Community Wireless Summit, 2006
The second National Summit for Community Wireless Networks will be held March 31-April 2, 2006 in Champaign-Urbana, IL. It's the largest gathering of community wireless networking developers, implementers and allies focused on building the alliance of technologists, policy experts, and implementers, and encouraging participants to discuss the great variety of challenges and opportunities facing the movement.
Healthier U.S.
This federal web site has resources on physical fitness, nutrition, preventive care, and avoiding risky behavior. Follow the eight links with helpful descriptions to more government health sites.
Multimedia Storytelling
Interactive narratives are informational and storytelling experiences designed and produced for the web. They leverage great design, visual journalism and rich-media content. There's a Weblog for folks who want to put up sites to share and discuss. A database of narratives and links and resources on producing Interactive Narratives and web design. From Hurricane Katrina diaries to newspaper stories online, you'll enjoy this only with a high speed connection.
J-Learning.org
J-Lab's new how-to site for community journalism is a companion to the New Voices citizen media initiative. J-Learning will cover Web hosting, HTML coding, digital photography, new media reporting and more.
Create PDFs Free Online
PDFonline.com allows you to create PDF files from a wide variety of formats, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint and JPEG files. Just attach a document by browsing to it on your local computer (PC or Mac), choose a file name for the new PDF and enter your e-mail address. Within minutes, you will receive your PDF file via e-mail. File sizes are restricted to 2MB. To reduce Spam, consider using a free Hotmail or Yahoo address just for this purpose.
Covering Health Issues
The Alliance for Health Reform, a nonpartisan organization, has published a book especially for journalists, but of interest to any who want to know about health policy issues. Each chapter contains a long list of resources and plenty of story ideas. Available for download, in English and Spanish, as one large pdf file, or chapter-by-chapter.
Baby Boomers and Civic Engagement
A free publication from Harvard School of Public Health and MetLife Foundation provides ideas to get baby boomers involved in their communities--ways to utilize their time, energy, and talents in productive ways. The boomer population, by every measure of civic engagement has participated much less in civic life than the previous generation. Get the whole publication as a PDF or just read the highlights in a summary document on the Web.
Build Your Web Resources
Every Sound Partners project has an opportunity to place their ongoing reporting on health issues into a meaningful context by building permanent Web resource centers such as FAQs, primers and timelines. With just a bit of imagination and creativity, you can take home key concepts by reading an article by Dan Froomkin of The Washington Post. He extolls the in-depth knowledge obtained by "beat reporters," (such as Health Reporters) over the long haul of covering "chronic stories" (those stories that just won't go away or that unfold over extended periods of time). Froomkin says that good context reporting can stick around on the Web in an "evergreen" package. Don't be put off by his newspaper-based examples or the tension between the newsroom and online producers that exists in print journalism. Remember that we maximize our results through our media and community partnerships.
Terrific Food Info Source
The Cook's Thesaurus provides information on food and is a great resource for anyone on a restricted diet. Almost every entry has a picture and all have information on substitutes and the effect on recipes if you use the substitute. Simple to navigate.
Covering Trauma
Poynter Online's Jonathan Dube profiles the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma in his weekly column. He writes, "Between the Iraq war, ongoing terrorism threats and everyday stories of violence, all reporters should know how to cover traumatic events." The Tips & Tools section has tip sheets for journalists covering violence, trauma, or mental health issues. Great links to other resources and self-paced learning modules are also available.


