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 Personal Finance Reporting Program
Improving Personal Finance Literacy in Hispanic Communities:
A Training Program for Latino Journalists

Sponsored by The McGraw-Hill Companies

Apply here:

 

The Denver workshop will be on January 16 & 17, 2009

 

The Personal Finance Reporting Workshop in Denver will provide hands-on training to Latino journalists working at Spanish and English language news organizations in the United States. Even though most selected participants will be from the Denver Metropolitan Area and surrounding cities, there will be a limited number of scholarships for out-of-state journalists. The purpose of this program is to provide an opportunity to improve personal finance literacy in Hispanic communities in the United States by training Latino journalists to effectively cover consumer finance issues. Between 10 and 15 journalists from print, radio, television and on-line media outlets will participate in a two-day workshop. The training will address the full spectrum of critical personal finance topics, including investing, consumer debt, financial planning, mortgages, and retirement planning.

Purpose 

This program would expand the ability of the increasingly influential Hispanic media in the United States to provide timely and reliable personal finance information to the Latino community. Given its enormous buying power—estimated to reach $1 trillion in 2008—there is a pronounced need for the Hispanic population in the United States to improve its personal financial literacy. This is particularly true in immigrant communities, whose members generally come from developing countries with cash-based economies.  Unaccustomed to the American system of credit financing—and often unaware of the serious consequences of consumer debt—these communities are highly vulnerable to predatory lending practices and outright credit scams.

Training Hispanic journalists to cover consumer finance issues can be a very effective way to raise personal financial literacy in Latino communities. Ethnic media comprise the fastest growing industry segment in the United States.

The workshop agenda will include:

1. Information sessions featuring experts on personal finance topics, such as mortgages, consumer finance, investing, debt management and benefits, etc.;

2. Training sessions on what service journalism is and how the audience should have a practical “take-away” from each story;

3. Panel discussions about current issues such as how fraud is affecting the Latino community: Auto buying vs. leasing, college loans, rent-to-own schemes for household goods, advance-fee loans, identity theft, and other forms of fraud targeting immigrants;

4. Discussions of journalism ethics while covering personal finance issues, including topics such as anonymous sources, fairness and balance, and conflict of interest.

Application deadline: December 20th, 2009.


For more information, contact
Isaac Itman, Program Officer:
iitman@icfj.org



Learn more about ICFJ's impact on journalism in Latin America


The Hispanic Personal Finance Reporting Program: Two Parts

Sponsored by the McGraw-Hill Companies
Two workshops provided hands-on training to journalists with the aim of to improving personal finance literacy in Hispanic communities in the United States. The program was aimed specifically at Latino journalists at Spanish-and English-language Hispanic news organizations in New York City and the Washington, D.C., metro areas.


 
The 2007 Sustainable Development and Conservation in the Gulf of California Workshop 
Sponsored by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and the International Community Foundation
Partner: Center of Journalism and Public Ethics (CEPET) and Michigan State University’s Knight Center for Environmental Journalism
This project helped build the capacity of the news media to cover the Gulf of California’s development issues in depth. Growth issues ranged from the construction of a coastal highway, real estate development, tourism policies, agriculture, aquaculture, and climate change.

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