
The Montana Media Lab empowers youth in rural and Indigenous communities to find their voices. We teach teens how to tell stories about their own experiences using audio journalism. Along the way, students get a look inside the media landscape. Participants say the workshops help them feel confident in their abilities to separate fact from fiction on the internet.
We’ve worked with high schools in Lodge Grass, Ronan, Box Elder, Missoula and many other Montana communities. Interested in starting a youth voices audio storytelling project in your school? Get in touch!

Youth Projects
Poplar students document annual buffalo hunt
What does the buffalo mean to the Nakoda and Dakota people of Eastern Montana? That’s the question students in Poplar set out to answer during a hands-on cultural education week. […]
Arlee students cover new community center
After their fellow students expressed concerns for the lack of employment and after-school activity opportunities in Arlee, Montana, young journalists at Arlee High School embarked on a reporting journey to […]
Lame Deer Teens Explore Energy and Journalism at Chief Dull Knife College
Written by Youth Voices Program Manager Mike Green What does the future of energy look like in southeast Montana? That’s the question a group of high school students in Lame […]









