Freedom Forum names Zita Arocha training coordinator for journalists program
09.07.00
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ARLINGTON, Va. Veteran journalist Zita Arocha has been named
training coordinator for The Freedom Forum's Chips Quinn Scholars Program,
which provides training, financial assistance and mentoring to young
journalists of color.
"The Chips Quinn Scholars Program is a key component of our efforts to
help daily newspaper newsrooms diversify their staffs. So we are
especially delighted to have Zita – with her experience as a bilingual
journalist, as a teacher and as a leader of the National Association of
Hispanic Journalists – focusing full time on the professional development
of our scholars," said Charles L. Overby,
chairman and chief executive officer of The Freedom Forum.
In her new role, Arocha will develop training programs for three
classes of Chips Quinn Scholars each year and work with the newspapers where
scholars are interning. She also will coordinate professional development
opportunities for alumni of the program, including online learning through the
scholars' Web site (www.chipsquinn.org). The program, which began with
six scholars in 1991, has trained more than 500 young journalists of color.
Born in Havana, Cuba, Arocha is a former reporter for
The Washington Post,Miami News, The Miami Herald and its
Spanish-language edition, El Nuevo
Herald, and The Tampa
Times. As a free-lance journalist, she specialized in
education, immigration and Hispanic affairs, writing for such publications as
USA TODAY, The
Los Angeles Times, Congressional
Quarterly, Hispanic magazine and others. She has won several awards for
her writing, including a Public Service Award from the Florida Press
Association for a five-part series on migrant labor in Florida. To
develop the series, Arocha lived in a migrant labor camp and worked in the
fields picking vegetables.
From 1994 to 1996, Arocha was executive director of the National
Association of Hispanic Journalists. For the 1999-2000 school year, she
was a Freedom Forum Journalism Fellow at the University of Texas – El
Paso. While there, she taught and lectured on journalism and writing on
border issues and organized a conference on media coverage of the U.S.-Mexico
border. Arocha holds a master's degree in English and comparative
literature from the University of South Florida.
For more information, contact Donna Fowler, director/communications,
at 703/284-2887 or mailto:dfowler@freedomforum.org.