JournalismAI Fellowship

Using AI to make journalism better. Together.

The JournalismAI Fellowship is a global, collaborative programme that brings together journalists and technologists from around the world to use artificial intelligence technologies to enhance journalism and its processes.

Applications are now CLOSED for the 2024 cohort.
Read more about selected participants.

Up to 30 journalists and technologists will be selected to join the 2024 Fellowship cohort and work together over the course of seven months (April to November).

We invite applications from candidates working in news organisations anywhere in the world (although if you are outside of GMT-6 and GMT+8, it will be logistically challenging to participate fully). To take part in the programme, you need to have some experience working on products and/or stories that involve the use of AI technologies.

We’ve designed the programme so that fellows keep their jobs while they dedicate 8 hours a week to the Fellowship. Teams will be given financial support for project expenses, as well as mentorship and coaching from experts in the JournalismAI community. 

If you have any questions about the programme, you can join the dedicated Q&A sessions at 1 PM GMT on

  • Wednesday, January 10, 2024

  • Monday, January 15, 2024

  • Monday, January 22, 2024

If you have any questions about the JournalismAI Fellowship Programme, please contact our Programme Manager, Lakshmi Sivadas, at lakshmi@journalismai.info.

A 3-Step Application Process

  1. Express your interest

Interested applicants must first submit an initial application to pass the initial screening process. Pairs of candidates (one editorial, one technical) or individual technical and editorial candidates from news organisations may apply. 

2. Match with other shortlisted applicants

All shortlisted applicants will be invited to form teams through a guided match-making process facilitated by the JournalismAI team. You may form teams of four fellows or six fellows with an equal split between editorial/strategic and technical fellows.

3. Submit your joint project proposal

Once you have formed teams, you must submit a second and final application with your project proposal for the Fellowship period. 

2024 Fellowship Timeline

FAQs

  • If you are an editorial or technical person working in a news organisation, you are eligible to apply. You can apply either as a pair i.e. one editorial and one technical colleague, or, as an individual applicant. We recommend that you apply as a pair.

    All candidates must have some experience working on products and/or stories that involve the use of AI technologies.

    Regardless of whether you apply separately, or in pairs, you must form a team with an equal split of editorial and technical candidates in order to be eligible for final selection. You may form teams of four fellows or six fellows with an equal split between editorial/strategic and technical fellows.

    Fluency in English is required.

    This is not a training programme for journalists that have no experience working with AI technologies. If you are fairly new to this field, you should consider applying for our Academy for Small Newsrooms or the JournalismAI Discovery.

  • We are looking for project proposals that focus on building GenAI-powered solutions that enhance news reporting or newsroom systems and processes. We particularly like ideas that innovate content and formats to better inform audiences. We are not interested in projects focused on purely business solutions.

    Projects can be building on existing work or starting afresh. Browse previous Fellowship pages to learn what type of projects we selected in previous years:

    This is not a reporting grant to develop a single investigation. Projects should be aimed at prototyping a tool or a methodology that can have a systemic impact on news production – for example by making the reporting of a specific beat more accessible or impactful.

    1. APPLY:

    There are two ways in which to apply to be a part of the programme:

    We highly recommend that one editorial and one technical candidate from a news organisation submit a joint initial application

    [OR]

    Due to requests, we also welcome individual applicants this year. You may apply individually as an editorial candidate or technical candidate by filling in the individual initial application.

    The deadline for submitting your initial application is January 26, 2024.

    2. MATCH AND FORM TEAMS

    Once we screen your initial application, we will move you to the match-making component of the selection process. During the process, candidates must form teams with an equal split between editorial and technical candidates. For example, if you are a team of four, two of you must be editorial or strategic candidates, and two technical. The maximum number of candidates permissible per team is six.

    This will be a guided process that is slightly different from previous years. Only shortlisted candidates will be provided with the steps for forming teams.

    3. SUBMIT A FINAL APPLICATION

    Once you’ve formed teams of either four candidates or six candidates, you must submit a final application with your joint proposal that you will work on over the next seven months. The project must focus on building a GenAI-powered solution that enhances news reporting, or newsroom systems and processes. The deadline for the final application is February 18. We will inform candidates of the results by March.

  • The aim of the JournalismAI Fellowship Programme is to provide a safe space where fellows can explore and experiment with new ideas, away from the constraints of their day-to-day work.

    Through project-based work, the programme aims to advance fellows’ AI expertise, benefiting their own professional development and enabling their organisations to accelerate AI adoption and implementation.

  • The JournalismAI Fellowship Programme is participant-driven. Each team will organise and develop its work independently during the seven months, with guidance from the JournalismAI team and regular check-ins with the rest of the cohort.

    Each team will be provided with a coach/mentor, identified in coordination with the JournalismAI team, and will receive access to JournalismAI’s global network of experts, researchers, and innovators in the field of AI-journalism.

    Over the seven months, the teams will be guided through phases of definition, ideation, prototyping, and testing. The goal is to work together towards building GenAI-powered solutions that enhance journalism, its processes and systems.

    At the end of the programme, participants will present their work – and what they have learned from it – at the fifth edition of the JournalismAI Festival.

  • First and foremost, we ask participants to embrace the collaborative nature of the JournalismAI Fellowship Programme, which is what distinguishes this programme from other fellowships. “You get what you give” is the unofficial motto.

    If selected, you must commit to fully participating in the online sessions, sharing your expertise with the other fellows, and approaching the experience with enthusiasm, curiosity, and respect for your fellow participants.

    You should plan to spend an average of 8 hours per week on the Fellowship Programme, including independent work with your team, and regular cohort activities. Participation in the kick-off activities is mandatory.

  • Thanks to the support of the Google News Initiative, the programme is entirely free for selected participants.

  • Yes. We have allocated around GBP 6,000 per project to support research and project development expenses.

    The money is not a stipend or compensation (you are not expected to leave your job to participate in the Fellowship Programme).

    Additionally, all mentors will receive GBP 500 for the eight hours they will spend supporting your work.

  • No, the JournalismAI Fellowship Programme was launched in 2022. You can find the projects of our first cohort of fellows here, and the second cohort here.

  • Glad you asked!

    JournalismAI is a project of Polis – the journalism think-tank at the London School of Economics and Political Science – and it is supported by the Google News Initiative.

    Our mission is to empower news organisations to use artificial intelligence responsibly.

    Find out more about our activities on our website, and sign up for our newsletter.

Testimonials

A 2023 Fellow

The Fellowship not only gave us valuable technical skills but also taught us how to effectively communicate complex ideas and turn them to reality. I am thankful for the opportunity and certain that the abilities gained will shape my career path for years to come.

A 2022 Fellow

This has been one of the most enriching experiences in my career, and has allowed me to acquire new skills that are relevant to my field. The programme gave me the opportunity to collaborate with colleagues from diverse backgrounds and from numerous newsrooms, and helped small newsrooms like ours, get on board with cutting edge technologies.

A 2023 Fellow

I came in knowing very little about AI-building and left with a lot of knowledge that I believe I will use in future. The Fellowship also helped demystify AI. I initially found it very intimidating but I now understand that it can be done. I also got to network with great professionals who are very willing to share their knowledge.

Previous Fellowships

In 2023, 30 fellows representing 23 news organisations from 14 different countries across all continents worked together in 6 teams to develop a diverse range of AI-powered tools and projects.

In 2022, 46 fellows representing 23 news organisations from 16 different countries across all continents worked together in 10 teams to develop a diverse range of AI-powered tools and projects.

Previous Collab Challenges

Participants from more than 20 news organisations worldwide worked together to imagine and prototype new ideas to turbocharge journalism with AI, with the support of our regional partners: the Knight Lab at Northwestern University in the Americas, BBC News Labs and Clwstwr in EMEA, and the Times School of Media at Bennett University in APAC.

About 40 participants from more than 20 news organisations worldwide worked in teams to explore how AI technologies could help them address a set of challenges that they selected. Together, they imagined and tested new ideas that might lead to developing new tools and inform future experiments.