From the Arizona statehouse to the nation鈥檚 capital, Arizona State University students are reporting on the issues that matter to their readers.鈥

Arizona State University has offered journalism classes since 1931, and the program has grown exponentially since then. The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication became an independent unit of ASU and an integral part of the school鈥檚 new Phoenix campus in 2005. Later, Chris Callahan arrived from the University of Maryland as the Cronkite School鈥檚 new dean, eventually establishing newspaper partnerships and Cronkite reporting bureaus in Phoenix, Washington, and Los Angeles. Today, students report on issues affecting Arizona residents from these three bureaus, and Cronkite News airs on Arizona PBS.鈥

In the past, statehouse reporting was just one piece of what politics beat reporters would cover in the Cronkite News class鈥攁 capstone class for upperclassmen majoring in journalism, as well as master鈥檚 students. Now, more focus is being placed on statehouse reporting as news organizations struggle to fill growing reporting gaps in legislatures nationwide. This semester, three digital reporters have been assigned specifically to cover the state legislature in Phoenix, and one has been assigned to Capitol Hill in Washington.鈥

鈥淲e wanted to make a more concentrated effort around statehouse reporting,鈥 said Julia Thompson, professor of practice and managing editor for Cronkite News. 鈥淭hose three reporters have really elevated our statehouse coverage this semester, and one of our editors at a partner paper recently commented on how we鈥檝e stepped up our statehouse reporting. We鈥檙e definitely covering a lot of things we wouldn鈥檛 be covering if we didn鈥檛 have dedicated statehouse reporters.鈥

Student journalism at Cronkite have a wide reach, filling reporting gaps and making a real-world impact. Every day, Cronkite News sends a digest of their student-driven journalism out to a network of more than 170 partner publications. These partners include every daily news publication in Arizona, several in Colorado, and one in Montana. In addition to these partner publications, student stories are published to the , which is available to the public.鈥

鈥淲e function like The Associated Press in that regard,鈥 said Steve Crane, professor of practice and director of Washington operations for Cronkite News. 鈥淲e send out the stories and [our partner papers] use them or they don鈥檛. Everything we offer is free.鈥

While a major function of the Cronkite News class is filling reporting gaps with student journalism, the primary goal of the program is educating the next generation of journalists. Students covering politics in the Phoenix statehouse and on Capitol Hill鈥 obtain an authentic newsroom experience, and have the opportunity to learn about the political complexities of the statehouse and Congress.

鈥淔irst and foremost, our mission is education. We want to help the students develop when it comes to reporting on legislative issues. We took a group of students reporting on legislative issues to the Capitol at the beginning of the semester鈥 they learned a lot about processes and procedures that can be discouraging if you鈥檙e not familiar with that kind of reporting,鈥 Thompson said.

Students in the Cronkite News class produce stories involving rigorous field research and data analysis. Statehouse reporters cover public meetings, hearings, and press conferences; they also collect data, and break news that is relevant to Arizona audiences. These students take on challenges from interviewing public officials to manually creating spreadsheets hundreds of columns wide to analyze proxy voting trends.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 really proud of that proxy voting story. That was a ton of work,鈥 Crane said. 鈥淲e actually found that our Arizona representatives were among the ones proxy voting the most.鈥

Political beat reporters for Cronkite News stay tuned in on issues that impact Arizona on both a local and national scale, creating more well-rounded coverage of Arizona politics than would be possible without student journalism.

鈥淚f someone cares enough about something to come all the way from Arizona to DC to protest it, we鈥檙e here to talk to them, and I think that鈥檚 important,鈥 Crane said. 鈥淚n the DC bureau, our joke is that we鈥檙e the largest Arizona-based news gathering operation, because we鈥檙e the only Arizona-based news gathering operation here.鈥