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Leann Frola
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Beat Talk: Religion
Whether you're an aspiring religion reporter or a veteran of the beat, the Religion Newswriters Association (RNA) has a number of resources to make your job easier.

An especially helpful link is RNA's "Frequently Asked Questions." Answered in article form by religion reporters across the country, these questions address everything from what religion reporters do to covering a religion you don't believe in.

Here are a few things that caught my eye:

RNA
screengrab from rna.org
From spot news to weekly columns, religion reporters can do "most anything," according to Richard N. Ostling, an Associated Press religion reporter. Ostling offers specific suggestions on how to get started on the beat, including balancing hard news and features, using team coverage for national and global crises, and employing a variety of design formats.

Kim Sue Lia Perkes, who worked as religion editor for The Arizona Republic and religion writer for the Austin (Texas) American-Statesman, touches on the challenge of reporting religion accurately and ethically. She warns reporters to write with caution and care, "asking each step of the way whether your word selection, explanations and interpretations fairly represent both sides of the story."

For example, words like "pro-life" and "right-to-choose," she says, have an inherent bias:

It's one thing if pro-life is part of an organization's name, but to label abortion opponents as pro-lifers in a story is to imply the opposition is anti-life. On the flip side, to fall into the use of right-to-choose basically says you, the writer, have decided the legalization of abortion is, in fact, a right. Simply use anti-abortion and pro-abortion as descriptions that avoid subtle bias.

If you're serious about pursuing religion reporting, David Briggs of The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer recommends training through a bachelor's in journalism and a master's in religion studies. He received a bachelor's from University of Missouri's journalism program and a master's from Yale Divinity School.

And Gayle White of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ultimately reminds us why covering religion is important: It motivates, causes wars, influences politics, inspires art. "Not to cover religion," White says, "is to ignore a significant part of life."


Posted by Leann Frola 5:37 PM
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