Pulitzer Center | 2023 Highlights
The Pulitzer Center champions the power of stories to make complex issues relevant and inspire action. In 2023, we supported 367 journalists reporting in 103 countries, engaging audiences around the world with over 1,000 stories on underreported issues ranging from health and social justice to climate change. We are grateful to our journalist grantees, education partners, donors, and staff across 14 countries who make this work possible. Watch the highlights of our impact from 2023 and view our annual report: https://report.pulitzercenter.org/ann...
The Pulitzer Center offers regular webinars on underreported global issues, as professional development programs for teachers, as workshops for students, and even featuring live dramatic performances! Catch up on our webinar recordings today. https://pulitzercenter.org/webinars-demand
Washington Weekend is an annual celebration for the Pulitzer Center’s Campus Consortium Reporting Fellowship program, which supports student journalists from partner universities in covering underreported issues around the globe and within the United States. This year, from October 18 to 20, more than 40 Reporting Fellows from journalism schools, state universities, liberal arts colleges, HBCUs, schools of public health, and community colleges gathered in the U.S. capital to share their work, get to know each other, and explore the city.
Join us for an engaging webinar series where we delve into the critical links between climate, the environment—including oceans, forests, and other geographical landscapes—and governance. We will examine the impact of poorly regulated industries and inadequate law enforcement on the climate crisis, and brainstorm viable solutions to mitigate its consequences. Featuring Pulitzer Center stories, our discussions will bring together journalists, leaders from environmental and social movements, policymakers, and affected communities. This platform is designed to foster critical conversations on some of the most pressing and emerging issues of our time.
Your go to source for The 1619 Project education content. In partnership with The New York Times, the Pulitzer Center is building learning communities around The 1619 Project. We’re developing programs for K-12 Classrooms, out-of-school time programs, and higher education programs.
The world is full of stories, both far afield and in your own backyard. What stories tend to go under-reported, and how can we seek them out? What tools does a journalist use to find and tell stories that engage and inform audiences, while uplifting issues that don't often make headlines? This series equips students to answer these questions and embark on their own journalistic projects, at home or in their communities. Each lesson contains an instructional video featuring world-class journalists and editors sharing tips on a journalism skill, a printable lesson guide perfect for distance learning or in-class work, and activity prompts to apply students' new knowledge to a creative project of their own. https://pulitzercenter.org/lesson-plan-grouping/journalism-skillbuilder
In this series, Pulitzer Center grantee journalists explain their reporting projects. Learn about what it's like to report from the field, challenges journalists faced along the way, and other key takeaways when you go "Behind the Story."