There鈥檚 no shortage of news coverage in Houston.

But, 鈥渨hat kind of sets Community Impact apart is our hyperlocal focus,鈥 said Kelly Schafler, the South Houston managing editor for the outlet, which covers the Austin, Texas, and Dallas, Houston and San Antonio metro areas.

Community Impact鈥檚 mission is to serve local neighborhoods with city council and school board coverage, according to their . And recently they鈥檝e started to bring students into the fold.

Six students in Lindita Camaj鈥檚 data journalism class at the University of Houston published three articles with Community Impact this past spring semester. Each story was angled around local news and data.

鈥淭he idea was to get my students in data journalism to use some local data, so they can report on issues that are important to different communities 鈥 especially neighborhoods around Houston,鈥 Camaj said.

Students in the class learned how to scrape data, how to format it and how to use Microsoft Excel and data visualization tools, she said.

Then students paired up in twos and threes to write articles. Throughout the semester, editors at Community Impact visited the class to talk with students about their pitches and how to shape their reporting.

Schafler referred to herself and the other editors at Community Impact, 鈥渏ust the checkpoints in between,鈥 as students reported their stories and met in Camaj鈥檚 class.

Most in the class are journalism students, Camaj said, but a lot of them come into the first day with no data or statistical knowledge.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot to cover,鈥 she said.

But the toughest challenge, she said, was to steer students away from the big stories they wanted to cover, and get them to sink their teeth into stories just off campus.

鈥淭hat was the biggest challenge, to get students to realize that not all politics is national, you know?鈥 she said. 鈥淟ook at what's happening in your neighborhood.鈥

So they did.

Students pursued a slew of topics around Houston: Valerie Olivares and Gwyneth Mosbeck covered the city鈥檚 plan to increase the number of electrical vehicle ; Valeria Arrieta and Edna Gonzales covered the link between ; David Mercado and Georgia Faust tackled since the pandemic.

Camaj paid each student who worked on a story with money from a University of Houston grant she鈥檇 won. She incentivized students to try to get them published by offering extra money to those that ran in Community Impact.

The students wrote 10 stories in all, three of which were published in the outlet. The rest weren鈥檛 quite there, Schafler said. But perhaps with a little more time, they could鈥檝e been.

鈥淎ll the stories, with some reforming, a little extra work, could鈥檝e been published,鈥 she said.

Since Camaj is moving to take a job at the University of Florida as an associate professor, she鈥檒l no longer teach her data journalism course at the University of Houston. Schafler said the partnership won鈥檛 be available this fall semester, but she hopes to help ramp it back up come spring.