
Nisa Khan
Data ReporterNisa Khan joins Michigan Radio as the station’s first full-time data reporter. In that capacity, she will be reporting on data-driven news stories as well as working with other news staff to acquire and analyze data in support of their journalism.
Most recently Nisa has been working at the Detroit Free Press analyzing COVID-19 data. Additionally, she was a digital intern at Michigan Radio and worked with Michigan Radio's Peabody award winning Believed podcast team.
Nisa is a University of Michigan graduate in information science and has a Master’s degree in journalism from Stanford, where she focused on data and multimedia. She was a City University of New York (CUNY) Journalism Fellow at ProPublica where she did data journalism, as well.
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On Saturday March 16, at 4:35 p.m., in the middle of a vigil on the University of Michigan's Ann Arbor campus for the victims of the mass shooting in New…
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There will be lectures, marches, and celebrations across the state recognizing the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. today. The federal holiday marks King’s…
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NeighborhoodScout, an online database of hyperlocal real estate information, released its annual research on the top 100 "most dangerous" cities in the…
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Work in Progress “Work in Progress” is a new Stateside series about what it's like to be at opposite ends of the same career path. You'll hear…
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It has been a meaningful year for Michigan -- read the stories below to reflect on some of the highlights that Michigan Radio covered this year. Believed…
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Check out some of the most read and liked strips from John Auchter1. Michigan "wins the award" for worst special education2. Russian bots have an easy…
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Catch up on the most read stories about Michigan’s education system. Report: State took $4.5 billion from K-12 funds to plug budget holes It was supposed…
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From following the aftereffects of the Flint Water Crisis to the new discoveries of PFAS in the state, here is some of most important stories Michigan…
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A Michigan-based bar and restaurant chain plans to change the name of its "Crack Fries" in January to distance itself from a name associated with a drug…