News

Here's what journalists need to know to bolster their reporting on potential cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance ...
To help journalists, we read through dozens of published research papers and unpacked several recent studies about fluoride ...
Journalists, journalism faculty and others recently took our audience survey to give us valuable feedback on how we can help ...
For several years, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted routine childhood vaccinations across the U.S., reducing the number of children entering kindergarten vaccinated against serious, highly contagious ...
We spotlight free databases journalists can use to report on higher education issues ranging from the changing demographics of U.S. college students to graduation rates, campus crime, faculty salaries ...
While online social contact can be traced back to the 1980s, online dating began to gain more prominence — and participants — around 1997, according to a 2011 study by the Oxford Internet Institute.
Each year, thousands of people die trying to cross roads in the U.S., making pedestrian safety a perpetual policy issue in cities and towns of all sizes. That’s why local news outlets pay close ...
U.S. citizens ages 18 and older who are registered to vote can cast ballots in local, state and federal elections. But states, which conduct and administer many elections, including federal elections, ...
From the U.S. to Canada to Greece, wildfires have been wreaking havoc across the globe in recent months, burning land, forests and homes, and killing or displacing wildlife and humans. The smoke can ...
Health misinformation is not a new phenomenon, but modern-day factors such as social media, in addition to politicization of health and science and the fast pace of scientific development during the ...
If you answered A, you’re correct — and not alone. About 3 in 4 adults in the U.S. can discern real political news headlines from fake ones, finds a new paper, “Is Journalistic Truth Dead? Measuring ...