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In 2012, we resolved to extend our local programming and events even further into the First Coast community, to hear and respond to the needs articulated by citizens. In this report, we share our successes, made possible by the multitude of community members, staff and board members, community partners and organizations who comprise our WJCT family. — Michael Boylan, WJCT President and CEO WJCT is a dynamic force on the First Coast community, striving to serve the community in new ways. In 2012, WJCT launched the following new services, or enhanced existing services by incorporating new technologies: Complementing the reach of existing services, WJCT’s new services had deep impact in the First Coast community. WJCT works closely with community partners to identify and respond to community needs, striving to give community members a voice, opportunities to be heard, and access to resources to inform, enhance and improve their lives. • American Graduate Teacher Town Hall for Florida teachers • TEACH, a one-day conference for educators • Hometown, a monthly production showcasing First Coast attractions • First Coast Connect, a call-in radio program, and its on-location companion, First Coast Connect on the Go! • First Coast Forum, a quarterly forum on issues of local impact • Gave statewide voice to more than 100 teachers. • Connected 1,000 educators with national resources, local and national speakers, and awareness that they are truly appreciated. • Showcased dozens of local artists and arts organizations, increasing visibility and ticket sales. • Convened business and civic leaders for face-to-face discussion, sparking community conversations. • And more. Read on ... In 2012, while continuing its signature events, WJCT developed new partnerships and new initiatives, with a special focus on educators and students at risk. 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT IN THE COMMUNITY WJCT is a vital force on the First Coast community, striving to build an informed community through outreach, partnerships and more. In 2012, WJCT’s efforts and initiatives focused on four key areas: Education, Journalism / Public Affairs, Arts, and Health / Social Services. EDUCATION Since its very first broadcast more than 50 years ago, WJCT has focused on education. In 2012, as a new participant in American Graduate: Let’s Make It Happen, WJCT continued its ongoing efforts to keep kids in schools and determined to reach educators and students at risk in new ways. WJCT’s 2012 efforts included: American Graduate Teacher Town Hall. In April, WJCT convened the American Graduate Teacher Town Hall, drawing more than 100 teachers throughout Florida to the WJCT Studios to address the dropout rate and discuss the issues, concerns and topics they face each day in the classroom. The town hall was taped and broadcast throughout Florida in May. TEACH. In September, WJCT held TEACH, its first-ever development conference for educators. A thousand teachers attended the sold-out event, which featured national keynote speakers, breakout sessions with local and national experts, information about community resources, opportunities to network, and more. Response was so positive that WJCT has begun planning the 2013 conference. Jax Reads. To promote reading on the First Coast, WJCT partnered with the Jacksonville Public Library and community organizations to encourage the community to read and discuss The Things They Carried, a memoir about the Vietnam War. WJCT conducted a $1,000 scholarship essay contest for high school seniors and brought author Tim O’Brien to Jacksonville, where he spoke to high school students, veterans and other community members. “I wanted to deeply thank you for ‘saluting’ us Nam Vets as you did last night.” Email response to Blues Horizon special showcasing the Jax Reads selection, “The Things They Carried.” American Graduate Day. in September, during the national broadcast of American Graduate Day 2012, WJCT broadcast 14 segments it had produced to showcase local nonprofits working on the dropout crisis in Duval County. Agencies Included were Big Brothers, Big Sisters; United Way; Communities in Schools; Al Letson/Sanctuary on 8th Street; ICARE; Jacksonville Public Education Fund (JPEF); Girls, Inc.; ACE Mentor Program; Grand Park; and Boys and Girls Clubs. Teachable Moments. In 2012, WJCT produced Teachable Moments, a 26-week radio series that highlights the positive work being done by public school teachers in Northeast Florida. Profiles were also published in the Florida Times-Union and remain available at ondemand.wjct.org. Teacher Wall. At the TEACH conference, WJCT taped attendees discussing teaching and their views on education. The interviews were uploaded to Teacher Wall, a national teacher town square, and broadcast as radio features on 89.9 WJCT-FM. Share a Story. WJCT’s Share a Story is the centerpiece of the Annual Reading Celebration, a partnership with Duval County Schools that celebrates students who have read 25 or more books. In 2012, WJCT presented the 10th annual Share a Story. The event was hosted by Cyberchase’s Bianca deGroat and featured local “celebrities” reading aloud to help promote literacy. The 2012 event was attended by 4,500 kids and adults. Ready to Learn Workshops. WJCT’s corporate supporters sponsor individual schools, funding workshops that show parents and caregivers how to watch television interactively and promote reading skills. In 2012, WJCT conducted monthly workshops and related activities at 10 schools, reaching more than 1,000 parents. WJCT Kids Club. WJCT continued its Kids Club, which extends the reach of PBS Kids programming to help kids learn, while having fun. Kids Club activities in 2012 included singalong screenings of The Muppet Movie, which reached 325: Curious George at the Museum of Science and History (MOSH), which reached 250; and participation in Family Fun Day at the St. Johns Town Center, where WJCT brought gifts, giveaways, crafts and PBS Kids characters to 3,000. 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT IN THE COMMUNITY JOURNALISM / PUBLIC AFFAIRS More and more, WJCT is viewed as a community convener, a virtual town hall that brings citizens together to discuss the local issues affecting our community. WJCT gives First Coast community members direct access to community leaders through its interactive programming and events. WJCT’s 2012 efforts included: News Reports. WJCT’s news department produces regular spot news and in-depth news reports that air during Morning Edition and First Coast Connect. First Coast Forum. One of WJCT’s signature programs, the quarterly First Coast Forum convenes a panel of community leaders to discuss issues of importance to the First Coast community and invites community members to weigh in. In 2012, WJCT addressed downtown revitalization, local transit issues, and civility in America. First Coast Connect. WJCT’s First Coast Connect continues to make a significant impact on the First Coast. Hosted by Melissa Ross, the one-hour program airs weekdays on 89.9 WJCT-FM and streams online. The program features local newsmakers, civic and community leaders, arts, activities and more, along with spot news features and a weekly roundtable of local journalists. Community members engage via phone, email, tweets and Facebook posts. In 2012, the program received approximately 200 live callers per month. During one of Sheriff John Rutherford’s appearances, the Jacksonville Sheriff’s office carried the program’s audio and video streams on its own website. First Coast Connect on the Go! In response to positive feedback to April’s on-location broadcast from TPC Sawgrass, WJCT launched First Coast Connect on the Go! to reach more deeply into the five-county First Coast. In 2012, the program broadcast live from Naval Station Mayport (Nassau County) and St. Augustine (St. Johns County). Jacksonville Legacy Series. In 2012, in partnership with Leadership Jacksonville, WJCT presented the first in a series of television programs showcasing local leaders. The first program showcased Dr. Frances B. Kinne, first woman president of a Florida university. CreativeWorX Programs. WJCT’s CreativeWorX team shares production expertise with local organizations, helping them showcase and share activities. In 2012, WJCT produced and broadcast The Power of Religion: Practical Pluralism in a World of Difference, a conversation with Dr. Diana Eck, Director of Harvard’s Pluralism Project, held during the University of North Florida’s Interfaith Week. Weekly Radio Segments. WJCT presents two locally produced radio segment, Closing the Loop, which explores how North Floridians are coping with today’s challenging economy, and Deemable Tech, which seeks to help people use technology to its full potential. Deemable Tech was inspired by its principals’ work on First Coast Connect. “[T]he phone has been ringing today after people ARTS heard your show this morning. WJCT is an integral player in the First Coast arts community. In 2012, WJCT made a We sold two tickets before I real effort to showcase local artists, allowing them to reach a wider audience through even got back to the office and appearances on local radio shows. WJCT also partners regularly with arts it’s continued throughout the organizations to advance their educational outreach activities, in particular by providing day. Thank you so much for access to our production resources, on-air promotion, and a presence on our website. giving us airtime. It really WJCT’s 2012 efforts included: makes a difference.” Hometown. In 2012, WJCT launched Hometown, a monthly series that showcases the people, places and things unique to the First Coast. One segment of each episode is regularly devoted to a local artists, arts organizations or venues. The program airs monthly and is available online at ondemand.wjct.org. Email from local theater director who appeared on First Coast Connect First Coast Connect / Studio 5 Sessions. Host Melissa Ross regularly features local venues, artists, authors, singers, dancers and musicians. In 2012, First Coast Connect produced more than 200 segments on local and national cultural topics. First Coast Connect’s musical guests often perform live. WJCT has recorded some of these incredible radio performances (with video), and reformatted them into a new online program, Studio 5 Sessions. Local artists featured in Studio 5 Sessions include Jenni Reid, Laurel Lee and more. 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT IN THE COMMUNITY The Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra / Ritz Chamber Players. During the Symphony’s season, WJCT’s radio schedule includes 89.9 Presents the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra, a weekly one-hour series that includes performance highlights recorded in Jacoby Symphony Hall, plus conversation with Music Director/Principal Conductor Fabio Mechetti and guest artists from the program’s performance. In 2012, WJCT also presented a month of weekly radio broadcasts featuring Jacksonville’s own Ritz Chamber Players, which features preeminent African American musicians and composers. After Hours. WJCT’s After Hours radio programming presents a diversity of local music programming for First Coast community members. In addition to its own music programs (Electro Lounge, Blues Horizon and This Is Jazz), WJCT gives talented local music enthusiasts an opportunity to produce programs. These weekly programs include Lost in the Stacks, selections from the Jacksonville Public Library’s often surprising music collection presented by librarians/hosts Matthew Moyer and Andrew Coulon (both recognized as 2012 “Movers & Shakers” by Library Journal); and Number 73, which premiered in April and features Eben Britton (Jacksonville Jaguar #73) blending a playlist of music with selected pieces of literature. ElectroLounge/Ponte Vedra Concert Hall Film Series. In July, WJCT partnered with the Ponte Vedra Concert Hall to present a Friday night film series, presenting classic films like Blade Runner, All the President’s Men, and more. HEALTH / SOCIAL SERVICES WJCT seeks to empower citizens, reaching into the community to connect them with resources that can help them live richer, more informed lives. WJCT itself serves as a resource for other nonprofits in the area, helping them to fulfill their missions by providing production assistance through CreativeWorX, free access to WJCT’s facilities for meetings, and on-air promotion through media partnerships. In 2012, WJCT’s efforts to promote health and well being included: “Excellent, well-organized and fun. Very informative!” Speaking of Women’s Health 2012 attendee Speaking of Women’s Health / Lunch and Learns. In August, WJCT and Baptist Health again partnered to present the 12th annual Speaking of Women’s Health Conference for 900 women. The much-anticipated event included national speakers, informative breakout sessions, free personal screenings and more. The event also honored two First Coast women for their efforts to improve the health and well-being of women and children. WJCT and Baptist Health also partnered to present monthly Lunch & Learns, providing community members access to a diverse range of health topics and experts free of charge. Radio Reading Service. Radio Reading Service enriches and empowers the lives of individuals in Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia who are visually impaired and print challenged. Staffed by local volunteers, WJCT’s Radio Reading Service broadcasts continuous readings of local and national newspapers, books and other materials to assist print-impaired individuals. The service is available online and through special receivers distributed to community members. In 2012, WJCT distributed 59 additional radio receivers. Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Sweater Drive. Each year, WJCT partners with local schools and businesses in the annual sweater drive, in 2012 collecting and distributing more than 10,000 items at the Clara White Mission and to other social service organizations serving neighbors in need. 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT STORIES OF IMPACT FIRST COAST FORUM One of WJCT’s signature programs, First Coast Forum airs on TV, radio and online. Each quarter, WJCT works with its 21-member Community Advisory Board to identify topics of local import, then convenes a panel of community leaders for face-to-face discussion. The live panel discussion is complemented by spot news reports and man-on-the-street interviews. In 2012, WJCT expanded social media participation and showcased three timely topics: The Downtown Dilemma, covering downtown revitalization; The Transit Predicament, which First Coast particularly engaged the biking community; and community members Civility in America, produced in association with weighed in by phone, email, the Jacksonville Human Rights Commission. Facebook and Twitter. In addition to conversations on Facebook and Twitter, First Coast Forums inspired more than a dozen articles in online news and blogging communities in 2012. HOMETOWN In 2012, WJCT launched Hometown, a monthly program to showcase local attractions. The program reflects a happy partnership that promotes community organizations and initiatives, while informing community members. In 2012, the program featured a diversity of interesting people and places, including the CoRK Arts District, the community initiative OneSpark, BEAKS bird sanctuary, Jaguars owner Shad Khan and more. The program strikes a chord with community members. CoRK Arts District Segments posted on Hometown’s youtube site have aggregated more than 9,000 views. 10th ANNUAL MISTER ROGERS’ NEIGHBORHOOD SWEATER DRIVE In 2012, WJCT and VyStar Credit Union again partnered to present the Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Sweater Drive, inspiring community members to contribute more than 10,000 sweaters, jackets and blankets to neighbors in need. In 10 years, the sweater drive has grown from a single drop-off point in the WJCT lobby to a community-wide partnership with multiple drop-off points and school participation, celebrated in 2005 with a visit from David Newell (“Mr. McFeely”). This year’s items were distributed to 10 local social service organizations, helping them to fulfill their mission of serving the community. In 10 years, First Coast community members have contributed 100,000 sweaters to the Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood Sweater Drive. 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT STORIES OF IMPACT AMERICAN GRADUATE TEACHER TOWN HALL As part of its participation in American Graduate: Let’s Make It Happen, WJCT conducted a Teacher Town Hall to address Florida’s dropout crisis. Taking the lead, WJCT partnered with five Florida stations. On April 28, more than 100 Florida teachers convened in the WJCT Studios to participate in the live forum, which was taped for later broadcast. Jacksonville poet, playwright, and NPR host Al Letson, a former teacher, hosted the two-hour conversation. The teachers discussed their ideas and classroom experiences, providing candid, in-depth and revealing insight into what needs to be done to address Florida's dropout crisis. Teachers drove the discussion. Prior to the taping, teachers filled out an online poll describing their thoughts and concerns about education and drop outs. Their responses WJCT and its helped WJCT identify discussion topics. During the taping, partnering stations have teachers participated in cell phone polling to provide created the Florida instant responses, which helped guide the conversation. American Graduate Facebook page, where Community partners made the day. Photographs on they continue to share the set are from the One in Three exhibit at MOSH, information about the designed to inspire community-based solutions to the dropout crisis. dropout crisis, and reflect WJCT’s ongoing partnership with the Jacksonville Public Education Fund. Host Al Letson and PBS NewsHour Reps Broadcast. The finished program, a one-hour television production also produced for radio, premiered on WJCT-TV and 89.9FM on May 24. The Town Hall was simultaneously broadcast on public television and radio stations across Florida. HITTING THE MARK Teacher comments included: Thank you Florida's American Graduate for holding this Town Hall and I hope that it gains the exposure and attention that is needed to help our children/students, teachers and schools. Continuing the Conversation. Thirty-three articles about the Town Hall appeared online, in print and on air, in media outlets across Florida, in Mississippi, Indiana, Boston and even the United Kingdom. The best part of the Town Hall was that it allowed teachers to express their concerns and feel like they really have a voice. We were able to give valuable input and we felt like we were being heard by an organization that cares and that wants to make a difference. 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT STORIES OF IMPACT TEACH, A One-Day Conference for Teachers WJCT’s greatest success in 2012 was TEACH, its first-ever one-day professional development conference for teachers, presented in partnership with Community First Credit Union of Florida at the Hyatt Regency Jacksonville Riverfront on September 15. Nearly 1,000 teachers attended the event, which sold out well in advance. The event built on the enthusiasm of the American Graduate Teacher Town Hall and was inspired by WNET’s Celebration of Teaching & Learning. Community Partners. Partners included co-host Community First Credit Union of Florida, the Schulz Center for Leadership & Training, the Jacksonville Public Education Fund, and representatives from five county school districts. The Duval County School Superintendent and Jacksonville Mayor Alvin Brown made surprise appearances at the event. National keynotes Brad Cohen and Lucy Calkins National Keynotes. The Schultz Center conducted a poll of Northeast Florida teachers and learned that many had to travel long distances to access national speakers and resources. Responding to the pre-event survey, the Committee secured two national keynote speakers: Common Core expert Lucy Calkins and Brad Cohen, an award-winning teacher who discussed living with Tourette’s Syndrome. Signature Elements. Breakout sessions with national and local experts covered 18 educational topics, including PBS Learning Media and Mission US (taught, respectively, by WGBH and WNET reps), ATTENDEE COMMENTS using iPads, and more. Perks included a “Teacher Prior to TEACH, Thank you for a great day and Lounge” staffed by WJCT radio hosts, a gift bag, and 40 only 57.7 percent of making me proud to be a teacher. exhibitors secured by corporate marketing to showcase attendees used PBS or local resources, along with opportunities for teachers to WJCT as an educational This was truly rejuvenating and network, share ideas, and to know that they are truly resource. After the motivating. In a time when there appreciated. conference, 97.4 percent are so many pressures being said they would begin piled on teachers, that was a Results. Response was so positive that WJCT has using PBS and WJCT breath of fresh air. :-) already begun planning the 2013 conference. as an educational resource. This was a fantastic event. The meals were so nice. Friday night I was so sorry I had signed up and would be missing my Saturday. Turns out it was a TEACH received great day. excellent feedback and Thank you rave reviews. In the so much. exit survey, attendees rated the event Can't wait for next year! How out of 10. can you beat this year's keynote speakers?!” 9.36 Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! 2012 LOCAL CONTENT AND SERVICE REPORT SUMMARY