. Home
Join NAHJ
Our Mission
Bylaws
Awards
Renew your Membership
Board Members

Contact Us
NAHJ Jobs & Internships
Convention
News From the Region
Student Programs
Press Releases
NAHJ Merchandise
Strategic Plan
The Parity Project
Campaign for Parity
Hall of Fame
UNITY 2004
Afíliese a la NAHJ
Historia
Misión
Plan Estratégico
Comunicados de prensa

Membership Questions?
 Contact Member Services: 1-888-346-NAHJ or email membership@nahj.org

Student Programs

Scholarships and Journalism Workshops Offered by Other Latino Journalism Organizations


Arizona Latino Media Association (ALMA)
does not currently offer scholarships or journalism workshops.
The California Chicano News Media Association (CCNMA) is the first organization dedicated to journalists of color to be established in the United States. CCNMA was found in 1972, two years after the death of NAHJ Hall of Famer and former Los Angeles Times columnist Rubén Salazar, who was killed during a Chicano Anti-Vietnam War Moratorium in East Los Angeles. CCNMA holds its annual Joel Garcia Memorial Scholarship competition ever year beginning in January. The annual postmark scholarship application deadline is the first Friday in April of each year. High school seniors and college students are eligible, but they must either: 1) be residents of California (residents of that state who attend a college or university in another state are still eligible) or 2) attend or plan to attend a college or university that is within the state of California.
CCNMA Central Valley Chapter - Bakersfield College (California) Summer Multicultural High School Journalism Workshop is held for two weeks in early June. The workshop is co-sponsored by Bakersfield College, The Bakersfield Californian newspaper, the Dow Jones Newspaper Fund and CCNMA. About 20 high school students will be selected to attend the three-week course, which teaches reporting, photography, Internet research and computer design of news pages as students produce their own newspaper. At the end of the workshop, five $100 scholarships will be awarded to the most promising students at an awards luncheon. The top two students also will be nominated for a $1,000 Dow Jones Newspaper Fund college scholarship. For more information, contact Kathy Freeman, workshop coordinator, at (661) 395-4344 or email kfreeman@bakersfieldcollege.edu.
CCNMA Sacramento Chapter Summer Multicultural High School Journalism Workshop is offered for Sacramento, CA-area high school students who are pursuing careers in print or broadcast journalism. The Sacramento Bee plays a role in this workshop. The CCNMA Sacramento chapter also offers scholarships to Latino student journalists who are pursuing careers in English print or broadcast journalism. For more information, contact CCNMA Sacramento chapter president Pablo Espinoza of Univision TV affiliate KUVS at: (916) 614-1971 or by e-mail at pespinoza@univision.net.
CCNMA San Diego (California) Chapter Summer Multicultural High School Journalism Workshop is open to high school juniors and seniors who attend school in San Diego, Imperial, Riverside and San Bernardino counties who are pursuing careers in journalism. Students spend two weeks each summer at a journalism boot camp, guided by professional journalists in the classroom, but most importantly, out in the field. That field experience in a student's journalism career is commonly reserved for juniors and seniors at the university level. The students produce a newspaper, a television newscast and a radio newscast. But they also attend classes on writing and grammar and participate in panel discussions on ethics in journalism and interviewing techniques. The students stay in dorms at a San Diego-area university during their participation in this workshop and are supervised by professional journalists. The San Diego and Inland Empire chapters of the California Chicano News Media Association organize the workshop. Their principal partners are The Dow Jones Newspaper Fund, The San Diego Union-Tribune, The Riverside Press-Enterprise, NBC 7/39 and KPBS radio. The instructors are reporters, editors and photographers from those media organizations. Since 1982, the San Diego workshop has trained over 400 high school students. It is one of the oldest such programs in the nation. Approximately two-thirds of the students have subsequently attended college and have graduated. In some cases, the former workshop students working in journalism are returning to help the newest workshop participants.
CCNMA San José (California) Chapter Summer Multicultural MOSAIC High School Urban Journalism Workshop is open to high school juniors and seniors who attend schools in Santa Clara, San Benito, Santa Cruz, southern Alameda or southern San Mateo counties. Latino, African American, Native American and Asian American students are strongly encouraged to apply. Experience is not required, but you should have good writing skills, a willingness to learn and the desire to explore a career in journalism. The two-week program is held on the San José State campus, where students will work in the university's newsroom and live in the campus dormitories. At the end of the two weeks, students will have learned the basics of reporting and writing under the guidance of professional Bay Area journalists. They will have spent hours tracking down real-life sources such as politicians, celebrities, lawyers and police officers. They will see their bylines or photo credit line published in their own newspaper. Check out the 2003 CCNMA San Jose Chapter Mosaic workshop newspaper.
CCNMA Tri-County Chapter (San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura, CA counties) offers scholarships to Latino high school and college students who live or attend school in one of those three counties. For more information, contact CCNMA Tri-County chapter president Frank Moraga of The Ventura County Star at: (805) 645-1052 or by e-mail at moraga@insidevc.com
The Chicago Association of Hispanic Journalists (CAHJ) has held its six-week MULTICUTURAL PRESENTE high school journalism workshop since 1993. High school sophomores, juniors and seniors (grades 10 - 12) who attend schools in the greater Chicago area have a chance to work with professional English and Spanish-language journalists. The students meet with the professional journalists every Saturday for a little more than a month during the spring. Students work on a broadcast or print, production while covering stories in and around Chicago.
The Dallas-Fort Worth (Texas) Network of Hispanic Communicators offers scholarships to high school seniors and college students who have a permanent residence or attend school in the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area. Students must be pursuing a career in the communications field. The DFW Network of Hispanic Communicators is made up primarily of English and Spanish-language print, photo, broadcast and online journalists who work in that area of the Lone Star state. This organization's scholarship application is usually available on its Web site in December, with the deadline coming up in early March. DFW Network of Hispanic Communicators also holds an annual one-day journalism workshop for high school and college students that is co-sponsored by the University of Texas at Arlington Department of Communication.
The Georgia Association of Latin American Journalists (GALAJ) was founded in 2003. GALAJ plans to offer scholarships to students in the Peachtree state who are pursuing careers in English and Spanish-language journalism.
The Houston Association of Hispanic Media Professionals offers the Sylvan Rodriguez Scholarship to students who either attend a college or university in the Houston, TX area or whose permanent residence is in that area. This award is named after the late KHOU-TV anchor Sylvan Rodriguez, who passed away from pancreatic cancer in 2000. That same year, he was inducted into the NAHJ Hall of Fame.
San Antonio (Texas) Association of Hispanic Journalists (SAAHJ) offers scholarships to high school seniors and college students who have a permanent residence in San Antonio or Bexar counties. Application deadline is usually in early to mid April of each year.