What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by...

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What is news?

Transcript of What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by...

Page 1: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

What is news?

Page 2: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Criteria to judge news

Relevance

Interest

Usefulness

You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Page 3: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

More elements to judge news

Impact

Conflict

Novelty

Prominence

Proximity

Timeliness (previews)

Page 4: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Gatekeepers vs. navigators

Gatekeepers: traditional approach

Navigator: for now and the future

Page 5: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

What are readers looking for?

VisualDensely layered informationInteractionRelevanceDiversity

Give the readers a package. News you can use.

Page 6: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

How involved in the story should the media be?

“Civic” journalism or “public” journalism: Offers more than reporting. Offers a solution.

Page 7: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Journalism keys

A free, independent press is necessary to democracy. Fourth estate

Professional journalists must be accurate and fair.

Objectivity? Framing stories?

Page 8: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

How is news writing different?

From an English composition paper?

From a letter?

From a narrative story?

Page 9: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

News format

Inverted pyramid:Arrange news from

the most important to the least important.

Save the readers’ time and editors’ space.

Page 10: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Inverted pyramid

Puts the most important information firstArranges the paragraphs in descending order of importance.Requires the writer to rank the importance of information.

If master inverted pyramid, then you’ve mastered making news judgments.

Page 11: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

What is a lead?

A simple, clear statement consisting of the first paragraph or

two of a story.

The lead advertises what is coming in story and conveys the most

important information.

Page 12: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Leads — The “so what?” or “who cares?”

Who?What?When?Where?Why?How?

All news is local.

Page 13: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Lead length

Usually 25 words or less.

Page 14: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Inverted pyramid examples???

The Streator/St. Bede game opened with a kickoff.A fire broke out in downtown Tonica at 5 a.m. yesterday.The Ottville National Bank was robbed early this morning.The Ottawa City Council met yesterday.IVCC President Jean Goodnow spoke to the Peru Rotary yesterday.

Page 15: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Other factors

Slug

One idea per paragraph

Objective

Attribution

Checking and rechecking information

-30-

Page 16: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Tips from textbook

Always check namesKeep the lead shortAttribute opinionAnswer the six questionsWrite a sentence or paragraph telling readers what the news means to them.Report basic information even if its routine.

Page 17: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

One idea per paragraph

Keep your paragraphs short.

Paragraphs are usually no more than one or two sentences long.

Short paragraphs are hallmarks of newspaper, broadcast and online news writing.

Page 18: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Avoid editorializing

Don’t allow your opinion to creep into your news stories.

Attribute opinionated information to a source.

Page 19: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Facts

Something that has occurred

Something that actually exists

Something acknowledged as true or real

Something verifiable

Page 20: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Opinion

A conclusion

A judgment

A thought

A view

An estimate falling short of positive knowledge.

Page 21: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Avoiding editorializing

Statements of fact, if undisputed, can be printed without attribution to a source.

The score of the game was 98-87.

Page 22: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Avoiding editorializing

Statements of opinion must be attributed:

The season looks promising.This is an opinion, not a fact, and must be

attributed to a source.

The coach said the season looks promising.This sentence should be followed by a

direct quote from the coach about the season looking promising.

Page 23: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Editorializing examples

Everywhere on campus things are changing.

Switching to the Arrowhead Conference should be beneficial to the IVCC teams.

The musical includes a talented crew of singers.

The new phone system will save money and be more convenient for students and staff.

Page 24: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Fact or opinion?

A storm that dropped as much as five inches of snow in the Illinois Valley forced the college to cancel classes on Oct. 27.

Parking lot No. 5 will be resurfaced in March.

The work in parking lot No. 5 will not cause any parking problems.

Attendance at the Students in Free Enterprise Program was low.

Page 25: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Fact or opinion?

More than 200 people attended the Honors Colloquium program on Jan. 25.The Student Senate has had a busy year.Nearly $120,000 has been allotted to student organizations from student fee money.The Senate makes the allocations based on how active student groups are.

Page 26: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Provide attribution

Make sure the reader knows what sources you have consulted for your stories.

The best attribution is simple – someone said.

Page 27: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Checking and rechecking

Use all means at your disposal to verify a story is accurate.

Always check names.

Most stories should have more than one source.

If your mother says she loves you, check it out.

Page 28: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

Format

Use common copy editing symbols from first page of workbook.

Rather than giving your stories a title or headline, give them a slug. A brief two or three word description of what the story is.

-30- indicates a story has ended. Use this at the end of stories you turn in for class.

Page 29: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

The Truth About Reporting?

News organizations have to be fair. If someone complains that “you have to print (or carry) my side of this story,” the newspaper/station has to.Editorials shouldn’t be biased.News organizations must publish responses to editorials/columns when requested to.

Page 30: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

The Truth About Reporting?

Newspapers can edit letters to the editor before publishing them.If a story source demands to see a story before it appears in print, the reporter must allow the source to see it.If a source demands changes to a story before it appears, the reporter must make those changes.

Page 31: What is news?. Criteria to judge news Relevance Interest Usefulness You can determine those by knowing your audience. Who are you writing for?

The Truth About Reporting?

Members of the public can legally prevent their names or pictures from appearing in a news story.

Members of the public can sue a news organization if their names/photos appear against their will.

Reporters have First Amendment protection.

Reporters make a lot of money on newspapers, radio or TV stations.