AAJA has several programs that cater to different experience levels within its membership, starting from high school to mid-career professionals. The programs run annually with application windows open either at the end of the calendar year, or at the beginning of the new year. Programs are funded with foundation support and contributions from media sponsors.
VOICES (College Program) Voices is a summer multimedia journalism fellowship for undergraduate and graduate college students. Each year, a group of students are selected to work remotely part-time to report on issues related to Asian Americans. Professional mentors guide students through their assignments and provide a newsroom experience. Students also attend remote trainings while they work on their assignments in groups. Students that participate in the Voices newsroom are invited to the AAJA National Convention at the end of the summer to present their reports and to attend the convention. Travel and lodging are covered for students who are selected to participate. Since its founding in 1990, Voices has graduated hundreds of students who would go on to work in the media industry. The program's cohort of graduates include 27 published authors, 15
Emmy Award winners, seven
Pulitzer Prize recipients, four
Edward R. Murrow Award winners and two
Peabody Award winners.
JCamp (High School Program) JCamp is a selective national journalism program for high school students. It strives to confront the lack of diversity within the industry, in regards to race, religion, identity, geography, sexual orientation and socioeconomic status. The six-day training brings together a multicultural group of teenagers to sharpen journalism skills and work together in a unique learning environment. The curriculum consists of interactive workshops, hands-on training and field trips that emphasize cross-cultural communication, ethics, leadership and networking. Students demonstrate a keen interest in broadcast, newspaper, magazine, photojournalism or online media. JCamp is open to high school freshmen, sophomores and juniors from all backgrounds. There is no fee to apply and all expenses are covered. The program was founded in 2001 by
Star Tribune reporter Neal Justin,
Sacramento Bee reporter Josh Freedom du Lac and
Philadelphia Daily News reporter Mark Angeles as a response to the media industry's diversity crisis. More than 750 students have graduated JCamp since its inception, and alumni have been recognized with the highest honors in the news business. Approximately 75% of the program's graduates have gone on to pursue a journalism degree after graduating high school. Speakers have included
Hoda Kotb, co-host of NBC's
Today Show;
Kevin Merida, editor-in-chief of
The Undefeated;
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., publisher of
The New York Times;
Jemele Hill, writer for
The Atlantic;
Wesley Lowery, correspondent for
60 Minutes;
Seung Min Kim, White House reporter at the
Washington Post;
Cheryl Diaz Meyer,
Pulitzer Prize–winning photographer;
Byron Pitts, co-anchor of
Nightline;
Chuck Todd, host of
Meet the Press; talk show host
Jimmy Kimmel;
Jill Abramson, former executive editor of
The New York Times;
Carl Bernstein, the Pulitzer Prize–winning
Watergate reporter;
Tucker Carlson, anchor for
Fox News;
David Rhodes, former president of
CBS News;
Soledad O'Brien, former
CNN anchor;
Bob Schieffer, former moderator of
Face the Nation;
Gwen Ifill, former co-host of
PBS NewsHour; and Dennis Swanson, creator of
The Oprah Winfrey Show.
MSNBC anchor
Richard Lui, former CNN anchor
Joie Chen,
Politico deputy editor Clea Benson, former AAJA President Paul Cheung,
Minnesota Public Radio President Duchesne Drew,
Associated Press reporter Bobby Calvan and
Star Tribune photo editor Kyndell Harkness have all taught at the program. Alumni have been recognized with the highest honors in journalism, including more than a dozen
Emmy Awards, the
Peabody Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Alums include filmmaker
Jeff Orlowski, news anchor
Terrell Brown,
Washington Post reporter Arelis Hernandez,
Wall Street Journal photo editor Timmy Huynh,
ESPN reporter Brett Okamoto,
CNN producer Julia Chan, CNN reporter Brian Fung,
The Courier-Journal reporter Alfred Miller,
Los Angeles Times reporter Sandhya Kambhampati, filmmaker Adam Khalil, reporter Taylor Mirfendereski and fitness entrepreneur Jackelyn Ho.
Executive Leadership Program (ELP) The Executive Leadership Program is a week-long professional development workshop committed to journalistic excellence and leadership training. The program provides targeted professional development to diverse, high-potential, ambitious, and community-minded professionals. ELP also provides follow-up trainings for graduates at the annual AAJA National Convention. The program is open to all journalists who apply, regardless of membership to AAJA. The program has trained more than 500 media professionals since 1995. In 2018, ELP was held at the
City University of New York (CUNY). In 2019, the 24th class of ELP held its program at
ABC News in New York City. Also in 2019, the program expanded to include an inaugural ELP Asia with the program held in
Hong Kong.
Mentor Match The yearlong mentoring program pairs mentees with experienced mentors in the media industry in the United States as well as in Asia, through AAJA's Asia chapter. Applications for both mentors and mentees usually open by the end of the calendar year, with matches announced by March of the following year. Several factors are used in determining mentor/mentee pairings, including geography, gender, medium (print, online, broadcast, photography, etc.), and career interests. In recent years, Mentor Match has been able to provide mentors who work outside of traditional newsroom positions, including those who work as data journalists or as documentary film producers. In 2018, 130 mentor/mentee matches were made with applications coming from 27 states and internationally. Out of the mentors in the 2018 class, 51% had more than 10 years of experience. On the other end, 43% of mentees were students and 49% had less than five years of experience. == Media Watch ==