from training.npr.org: https://training.npr.org/2021/12/01/journalism-guide-terms-disability-ethnicity-gender-race/
Diversity

BIPOC? Latinx? Here’s how to describe people accurately
Group descriptors require the same kind of research and scrutiny as other facts journalists report on. Here’s a guide to getting it right.

A simple script for your diverse source tracking needs
Ask these questions in an interview to get the data you crave!

HAY-soos or hay-SOOS? Getting the accent right in Spanish
Unlike English, Spanish has rules of pronunciation that are simple and easy to learn.

During the pandemic, cover those we’ve left out
In times of crisis, journalists have the responsibility — even more so than usual — to seek out people who are often passed over by the media, even as stay-at-home orders make it harder to reach them.

It’s not a ‘Chinese’ virus: Let’s avoid pernicious shorthands
“Chinese virus.” “Hindu mobs.” Using geography, ethnicity and religion as modifiers is questionable at best and dangerous at worst.

Find experts using the Diverse Sources Database
NPR’s Source of the Week, a curated database of experts from racial and ethnic groups underrepresented in the media, was created to help the public media system diversify its source base.

Pronounce like a polyglot: saying foreign names on air
What if the pronunciation of a name has you stumped — and you have to say it on air? Here’s how to do it accurately and understandably.