Formation | 2014 |
---|---|
Founder | Elizabeth Green |
Founded at | New York City and Colorado[1] |
Merger of | Gotham Schools, EdNews Colorado |
Type | Non-profit organization |
Region | Chicago, Colorado, Detroit, Indiana, Newark, New York, Philadelphia, and Tennessee[2] |
Official language | English |
Jill Barkin, Elizabeth Green, Kang-Xing (KX) Jin, David Rousseau, Ann Sardini, Gideon Stein, Becca Van Dyck, Karen Wishart, Roberto Yañez[2] | |
Website | chalkbeat |
Chalkbeat is a non-profit news organization that covers education in several American communities.[3][4] Its mission is to "inform the decisions and actions that lead to better outcomes for children and families by providing deep, local coverage of education policy and practice."[5] It aims to cover "the effort to improve schools for all children, especially those who have historically lacked access to a quality education".[2] Its areas of focus include under-reported stories, education policy, equity, trends, and local reporting.[6]
Chalkbeat was founded as GothamSchools in 2008 by Elizabeth Green and Philissa Cramer. It merged with EdNews Colorado, founded by Alan Gottlieb, in 2013, and then redesigned and relaunched the website as Chalkbeat one year later.[5][7][8] Chalkbeat has eight bureaus where it reports news regularly: Chicago, Colorado, Detroit, Indiana, Newark, New York City, Philadelphia, and Tennessee.[2]
In New York City, Chalkbeat's competitors include three daily newspapers and a public radio station with an education-focused blog. Another key competitor is Capital Education, owned by Politico.[9]
In 2016, Chalkbeat clarified its expectations, standards and editorial practices by unveiling a formal "code of ethics" that covers all its bureaus.[10] Chalkbeat has also introduced an open-source impact tracking platform called MORI (Measures of Our Reporting's Influence).[11]
CodeOfEthics
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).MORI
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).