Writing articles for the school paper can be fun
and interesting. You can be the journalist who covers the school’s
basketball game or spring concert. Maybe you will go to school board
meetings and report back to your fellow students on the decisions the
board made. You might interview the principal about the new classrooms
being built because the school is expanding. There are all kinds of
stories waiting to be told by you. But writing stories for the
newspaper is not the same as writing an English paper or poetry.
Journalism has its own guidelines. The following will give you the
basic guidelines and some ideas on how to make your stories shine.
The first paragraph. The
first paragraph is the most important paragraph in a news article for
it gives the most critical information about the story. Space is
limited in newspapers so news articles present the most important
information first. Subsequent paragraphs contain information in order
of descending importance. This allows the editor the option of
shortening any story to fit the space available by cutting from the
bottom.
Who, what, where, when, and, maybe,
why, and how. In the first paragraph include all the
basic facts of the news story. Who did what? Where did the event occur?
When did it happen? Sometimes explaining why and how helps the reader
understand more about the importance of the event or helps the reader
connect to the story. For example, pretend you were covering your
school’s basketball game last Friday night. Here is how the first
paragraph of the story might appear. The comments in parentheses show
the basic facts.
In a knuckle-bitingly close (how) game
(what), the Cassadaga Cougars (who) topped the Independence 76ers (who)
by 1 slim point last Friday night (when) on the 76ers’ home court
(where). The final score was 68 to 67.
Senior Langston Barnard led the scoring with 22
points.
Make the story interesting. There
are several techniques you can use to make your story interesting to
your reader which will be covered in the next few paragraphs. The first
technique is quotes. People want to know what others have to say about
the event. You can quote experts, celebrities, or the ordinary Joe.
Following up on our example above, you might interview the coach, some
of the players, the school principal, or people in the stands. You
could also generate interest by explaining the importance of the event
in relation to other things. Continuing on with our example, you could
talk about where the team now stands in the rankings or how this game’s
performance compared to other games this season.
After the game, Coach Humbart said, “I
am proud of the way the team fought through to the very end. They just
kept coming back each time the 76ers scored.” The team had struggled
earlier in the season with consistency and keeping the pressure on
through the entire game. The last three games have been narrow
victories. The team still stands a chance to play in the county
tournament if it can win three more games this season.
As an alternative you could tell the story from
the point of view of a player. This alternative creates what is called
a “human interest” story. People are interested in how others feel and
what they do. Readers enjoy learning how someone overcame adversity to
succeed or survive.
Use clean, crisp English. News
writing should be short and to the point. News stories deliver the
facts quickly. However, readers get bored when they see the same story
with just the facts changed. Choose each word carefully and provide not
only information but a sense of urgency and impact. Take another look
at the first sentence in the example paragraph. In theory each time the
school’s team played a game, the newspaper could use the same sentence
and just change the essential facts. What if the newspaper ran a
sentence like this each time the team played?
The Cassadaga Cougars played the
Independence 76ers last Friday night and won 68 to 67.
Boring! Much better to run the original example
sentence.
Add pictures. Find
out if the school photographer will be covering the event as well. If
not, take a camera with you. Take lots of pictures so your editor can
choose the perfect one to accompany your story. Action pictures work
best, but they need to be in focus and have good contrast between the
lights and darks in the picture. If there is too much gray in a
photograph, it will not print distinctly enough for your readers to
tell what is happening. Get as close as you can to your subject by
“zooming” the camera lens in or moving yourself. Make the subject fill
the picture frame. Avoid background distractions. Take pictures in
landscape format and in portrait format to allow for different layout
options in the newspaper.
Be accurate. A news
reporter’s responsibility is to accurately report on event. Double
check the spelling of names, addresses, scores, dollar figures, and
other factual information you collect for your story. If you have a
recording device, record interviews. Write down details on a notepad.
Be fair. Remember to
cover all sides of any controversial issue. Contact people who are
advocating for different solutions to an issue and give them a chance
to explain their stand on the issue. When you report the issue, clearly
state the differing points of view. Allow readers to come to their own
conclusions about how they view the issue. Journalism is about seeking
the truth and giving unbiased reports.
Spell Check. Make a
diligent search for errors, including using spell check and grammar
check, before sending your story to the editor.
Bylines. A byline is
the acknowledgement of who wrote the story. In some newspapers, the
byline is simply your name. Other newspapers allow a little more space
for lauding the author of the article. Bylines give readers some
insight into the article writer’s expertise. Examples are “By Kevin
Block, Sports Reporter” or “By Lucy Witt, covering education issues in
the Piedmont”. Ask your editor about the newspaper’s policy on bylines.
Apply these guidelines to write quality articles
that grip, inform, and entertain your readers.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/k-12-education-articles/
writing-articles-for-the-school-newspaper-860718.html
About the Author
Celia Webb, President of Pilinut Press, Inc.,
publishers of advanced readers for children and ESL students. Check out
http://www.pilinutpress.com for
more free articles on developing reading-related skills, word games and
puzzles, and activity sheets for the company's entertaining and
educational books.
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