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OpenAI launches academy for news orgs to train journalists on practical AI
OpenAI has launched the OpenAI Academy for News Organisations, a learning hub aimed at helping journalists, editors and publishers adopt artificial intelligence in day‑to‑day workflows.
The initiative, introduced on 17 December 2025, packages training, playbooks and real‑world newsroom examples to support reporting, production and business operations.
At launch, the Academy offers on‑demand courses such as AI Essentials for Journalists, practical use cases spanning investigative and background research, translation and multilingual reporting, data analysis and production efficiency, as well as open‑source projects and guidance to build internal governance and responsible‑use policies.
The company said the programme was previewed a day earlier at an AI and Journalism Summit co‑hosted with the Brown Institute for Media Innovation and Hearst.
How newsrooms can use the hub
- Start with the AI Essentials for Journalists module to align reporters and editors on common terms and safe practices.
- Experiment with the practical playbooks for tasks like document review, background checks, multilingual drafts and structured data extraction, then adapt these to internal style guides.
- Use the responsible‑use templates to formalise policies on verification, attribution, disclosure and human‑in‑the‑loop review before scaling any AI‑assisted workflow.
Newsrooms worldwide are experimenting with AI to speed up research, improve translation and manage repetitive production tasks.
OpenAI positions the Academy as a practical, newsroom‑first resource that focuses on transparency and shared learning, not just tools, to address concerns about trust, accuracy and jobs.
Partnerships and reach
OpenAI said the Academy builds on its collaborations with the American Journalism Project and The Lenfest Institute. The company also referenced partnerships with publishers including News Corp, Axios, the Financial Times, Condé Nast and Hearst, and industry groups such as WAN‑IFRA and INMA, with content available in more than 20 languages.
The company added that ChatGPT serves more than 800 million weekly users, a scale that news organisations are keen to tap for audience reach.
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