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Maynard Regional Training Series: UNC

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Over a dark blue background, the Maynard Institute logo and the UNC/Center for Innovation and Sustainability in Local Media logo. White text reads "Thank you to our partners and faculty at UNC Hussman community!" Below, ringed in colorful borders with rounded corners, headshot/professional photos of Dean Raul Reis, a bald, smiling man with a graying beard and a blue suit, Marisa Porto, a woman with dark curly hair and glasses, Jennifer Mahone, a white woman with sandy brown curly hair and blue eyes, Sarah Vassello, a young woman with dirty blond hair and large hoop earrings, and Yanan Sun, a young Asian woman. Their names are below their photos on small banners the same color as each photo border.

Maynard Institute partners with UNC Chapel Hill Hussman School community to welcome second regional training cohort

By Maynard Institute Staff

The Maynard Institute’s Regional Training Series will welcome another dynamic cohort of emerging media leaders on July 17 and 18, hosted by UNC Chapel Hill’s Hussman School of Journalism and Media and the Center for Innovation and Sustainability in Local Media (CISLM).

The program will provide customized training from 15 news experts and a community of support for early and mid-career editors and managers in newsrooms as well as nonprofit and/or communications organizations. The first training day will kick off with a welcome from Dr. Raul Reis, dean of the Hussman School.

“The UNC Hussman Community deeply values the transformative work of the Maynard Institute,” Dr. Reis said. “We are proud to support their mission by sharing our space, time and expertise to help cultivate the next generation of leaders in journalism.

We are proud to support their mission by sharing our space, time and expertise to help cultivate the next generation of leaders in journalism.

Dr. Raul Reis, Dean, UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media

The Maynard Institute’s partnership with the UNC Hussman School and the Center for Innovation and Sustainability in Local Media builds on the allyship of both organizations. Odette Alcazaren-Keeley, director of the Maynard Regional Training Series, said the Institute is grateful for the exceptional support from the university.

“The deep knowledge of regional news and innovative frameworks of the UNC Hussman community’s faculty and specialists will be instrumental in propelling our mission. Alongside the expertise of executive-level Maynard faculty, they will help us continue incubating emerging media leaders who authentically represent our communities and are shaping newsrooms with integrity and courage,” Alcazaren-Keeley said.

“Our second regional training will provide concrete toolkits, cutting-edge frameworks, coaching and the Maynard community of support that will bolster the competency, successful leadership and resilience of frontline editors and managers,” she said. “It is crucial, especially in these adverse times with threats to journalism and vital institutions, to stand with them and their work that defends democracy.

It is crucial, especially in these adverse times with threats to journalism and vital institutions, to stand with them and their work that defends democracy.

Odette Alcazaren-Keeley, Director, Maynard Regional Training Series

Trainees represent a wide range of state, local, hyperlocal, community-powered and ethnic media outlets serving communities in North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and Virginia. Their work includes covering neighborhood businesses and the arts with The Carrborean, reporting on public education through EdNC, and sharing stories from Black communities in Gary, Indiana, through Capital B, among others.

Over the two days, attendees will explore leadership development topics ranging from editorial decision-making and finding the heart of the story to managing difficult conversations, a session led by the Institute’s senior director of strategic initiatives, Felecia D. Henderson.

“We have been very intentional about the sessions we are offering in this program,” Henderson said. “As former news leaders, we know the issues emerging news leaders face, such as having difficult conversations with employees. We want to provide frontline editors and managers with the confidence needed to lead with clarity, navigate change, and make a meaningful impact on those they supervise.

We have been very intentional about the sessions we are offering in this program.

Felecia D. Henderson, Senior Director, Strategic Initiatives

Jean Marie Brown, associate professor of professional practice at Texas Christian University’s Bob Scheffer’s College of Communication, will facilitate the Leaning into your Fault Lines® – Managing News Coverage session, which centers the Institute’s signature Fault Lines framework, designed to help editors understand how biases and blindspots inform the way they guide news coverage. 

Marisa Porto, UNC’s Knight Chair in Local News and Sustainability, will lead a session on Best Practices & Ethics in Artificial Intelligence, a topic that is impacting news organizations. “AI is going to continue evolving,” Porto said. “To adapt and remain successful, news organizations will need to have a strategic plan in place for how they can use AI to grow their audience, increase efficiencies, and improve their bottom line, while being prepared to adjust along the way.”

Attendees will also engage in a unique, live demonstration and interactive workshop of CISLM’S local news audience assistant – a custom GPT built to compile best practices, Q&As, tip sheets and more from journalism support organizations. The session will be led by CISLM’s Sarah Vassello and Yanan Sun. 

The two-day training will conclude with a discussion of news leaders representing organizations across North Carolina, such as the Charlotte Observer, La Noticia, Qcitymetro.com, the Asheville Citizen Times and The Assembly. CISLM interim director Jessica Mahone will moderate the discussion, which will focus on the state of media in North Carolina and the challenges of covering news in the midst of distrust of local and national media and government.

Also joining are Alli Pardue and Daneen Khan, respectively editor-in-chief and community engagement managing editor of The Daily Tar Heel, UNC’s award-winning daily student newspaper.

Meet the Maynard Regional Training Faculty & Partners – July 2025
Faculty:

Faculty:

  • Diego Barahona, editor, La Noticia
  • Jean Marie Brown, associate professor of professional practice, Bob Schieffer College of Communication, TCU
  • Glenn H. Burkins, founder/publisher, Qcitymetro.com
  • Maria Carrillo, consultant and coach, Carrillo & Associates
  • Rana L. Cash, executive editor, Charlotte Observer
  • Karen Chávez, executive editor, Asheville Citizen Times 
  • Tom Huang, assistant managing editor, Dallas Morning News
  • Kyle Villemain, founder/editor, The Assembly
  • Paul Hunton, president, North Carolina Public Radio- WUNC

UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media and CISLM
Partners & Faculty:

  • Raul Reis, dean, UNC Hussman School of Journalism & Media
  • Jessica Mahone, interim director, CISLM
  • Prof. Marisa Porto, Knight Chair in Local News and Sustainability, CISLM
  • Yanan Sun, local news researcher, CISLM
  • Sarah Vassello, project manager, CISLM 

Maynard Institute Executive Team:

  • Odette Alcazaren-Keeley, director, Maynard Regional Training Series
  • Nadia Campbell-Mitchell, director of development, Maynard Institute
  • Felicia D. Henderson, senior director of strategic initiatives, Maynard Institute 
  • Evelyn Hsu, co-executive director, Maynard Institute 
  • Martin G. Reynolds, co-executive director, Maynard Institute

“At a time when trust in institutions is under strain, our partnership with the Maynard Institute reflects our shared commitment to integrity, empathy and equity in journalism,” Mahone said. “We’re proud to support this program that gives emerging editors and managers the space, tools and community to lead with clarity and purpose and to build newsrooms where truth and a deep sense of responsibility to the public are at the center of decision-making.” 

The Maynard Regional Training Series is made possible thanks to the support of our generous funders The Ford Foundation and The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and donations from individuals who support our mission of diversifying journalism.

About the Maynard Institute

For more than 45 years, the Maynard Institute has fought to push back against the systemic lack of diversity in the news industry through training, collaborations and convenings. We are creating better representation in U.S. newsrooms through our programs which give media professionals the tools to become skilled storytellers, empowered executives and inspired entrepreneurs. 

Questions?

For more information about the Regional Training Series, please reach out to:

Odette Alcazaren-Keeley

Maynard Regional Training Series Director.

Simplified Summary

This article thanks the staff and faculty of the Hussman School of Journalism and Media at UNC. It lists the faculty members who will provide the Regional Training Series session. The article lists what the trainees will learn during the training.