Meet the Providence 5th-graders running their own newsroom

At Alfred Lima Elementary School, a student-run news crew is flipping the narrative on Providence’s public schools — interviewing state leaders, reporting in two languages, and sharing their stories with the world

At the Alfred Lima Elementary School, students report and produce their own weekly bilingual news show.
At the Alfred Lima Elementary School, students report and produce their own weekly bilingual news show.
Michael Jones/ Ocean State Media
Share
At the Alfred Lima Elementary School, students report and produce their own weekly bilingual news show.
At the Alfred Lima Elementary School, students report and produce their own weekly bilingual news show.
Michael Jones/ Ocean State Media
Meet the Providence 5th-graders running their own newsroom
Copy

Providence’s public schools have faced a lot of scrutiny lately.

A scathing and widely shared 2019 report from Johns Hopkins University called out low academic expectations, deteriorating school buildings, and communication problems with bilingual families.

But at the Alfred Lima Elementary School in the city’s West End, a crew of young journalists is publishing stories that present another narrative about their school system.

Their newsday begins with a morning meeting with their publisher, school librarian Tasha White.

Equipped with an iPad and an antique microphone, this crew of 5th-grade journalists roams the hallways for interviews with students and teachers. But they’ve also sat down with Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee, Lt. Gov. Sabina Matos, and Providence Mayor Brett Smiley.

They tape their show in two languages and release it on YouTube and social media.

Ocean State Media visited the Alfred Lima Elementary School this month to document the news crews’ process and how they produce their stories.

Advocates are calling for an unorthodox method to fight invasive species like the European green crab: just cook them up for dinner
Certification program responds to increasing demands and complexity of protecting the integrity of elections
Federal officials approved use of a loan program that helps businesses and nonprofits respond in the wake of disasters
The city says the price of one firetruck rose 63.5% in three years as manufacturers consolidated the industry, shared pricing information and delayed deliveries
The median price of a single-family home dropped year over year in May, but at $500,000, buying a house remains out of reach for many Rhode Islanders
Fifty years after Rhode Island’s first Pride Parade, the lawyer who helped secure the permit looks back on the fight that established Rhode Island’s annual Pride tradition