Showing posts with label writing for a newspaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing for a newspaper. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 November 2012

News Writing

Newspapers are read every day by millions of people. Mostly, newspapers should be straight forward, to the point and easily understandable. No bias or opinion should be included in news stories and the vocabulary should be simple.

The first sentence of an article should be between 20 - 25 words and contain all the important information; who, what, when, where and why. Try and start the first sentence with a person - news, after all, is about people.

There should be roughly four paragraphs in a news story. Most paragraphs are only a sentence long.

For instance, this paragraph is a simple sentence.

That's what keeps the reader engaged; short, sharp paragraphs.

The further down in a story, the less important the information is. None of the writer's opinion should be included, however, quotes can be useful. These are usually included in last paragraph as opinion is the least important. You should only include quotes if they add something to the story, don't use a quote that reiterates what you have just written.

THINGS TO NEVER DO WHEN WRITING NEWS STORIES

  • Being passive
  • Using words to imply you know who's fault it is
  • Starting with a question
  • Describing the news as something i.e. good/bad/shocking

THINGS TO AVOID WHEN WRITING NEWS STORIES
  • Using basic words such as 'welcome'
  • Using adjectives
  • Using colloquialisms and connectives
  • Using drop introductions
  • Using words such as 'claim' which imply elements of doubt
  • Typical cliches