Who we are and why we start
Introduction
One amateur,
ZsuZsi Nagy decided to apply for Poynter’s News University to have a
better understanding on journalism, as she would like to report on
development cooperation in the future. While travelling in Central
America and East Africa she entertained her friends through her blog and
massive amount of e-mails sharing the experiences she gained, saw, felt
in these countries. Due to the positive feedbacks and encouragements
she decided to get engaged in journalism. After returning from her
volunteer work in Ethiopia she published her first article in the online
National Geographic Hungary. Currently she is working for an NGO in
Vienna and is working on fulfilling her dreams.
One semi-professional,
Dániel Belenyi, decided to apply for the e-learning course to refine
his talent and knowledge he gained through reporting his travels around
the world. Backpacking in Vietnam, Cambodia, guiding mountaineers to the
highest peaks of Iran, motorcycling in the Guinean jungle, covering
from the riot in Cairo, only some of his reports. These experiences
combined with his graphomania earned him -and his blog
”danielfromhungary”- a GoldenBlog price in 2011. Daniel is working for
the Hungarian Interchurch Aid and is responsible for the fact finding
missions before the projects actually get realized and is trying to
„control the uncontrollable” on the scene.
What is Poynter
Poynter’s
"Reporting and Writing About Development in the World" is a 12-week
class that uses an innovative, collaborative approach to introduce the
fundamentals of international development to journalists covering this
broad subject area. Biweekly there are invited speakers who reveal what
international development is; they introduce the improved techniques of
interviewing, how to produce reports for multimedia and mobile
platforms, ethics of coverage and the importance of avoiding
stereotypes, etc.
To Poynter’s course 7 participant from 4
countries were selected and each participant (OK, Dani and Zsuzsi work
together, but it’s still fair) will produce a Capstone Project, which
will be a report, blog or website on international development that
gives citizens of their home country or region relevant information on
the topic.
Yes, this is the aim of this blog.
Why WaterProjectsInEthiopia?
Zsuzsi
used to work and Dani is currently working on Ethiopian projects and
over a pint of beer, these two souls figured out they both want to write
about water projects in this country. So why not working on the NewsU
report together?
Dani has a good overview on the NGO’s well
reconstruction and Zsuzsi is more into the business factor. Two
stakeholders from two sectors (business and civil) with two different
conceptions (for profit investment and non-profit development project)
for the same goal can be interesting enough for comparison.