Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Student Yearbook Guide Q's & A's

Student Yearbook Guide

Reporting
1.     Good Reporters
a.     Arrive early and stay late
b.     Look for specific information about the place
c.     Understand the power of sights, sounds, smells, texture, taste and emotion
d.     Note the details that are colorful and not obvious
2.     Research
a.     Background info helps reporters know what the readers that to hear about
b.     Provides direction for the rest of their reporting
c.     Helps shape better questions
3.     Interviews
a.     Have many questions to ask
b.     Listen closely to how questions are answered
c.     Learn to look for unexpected

Writing          
1.     Notes
a.     Read and find out what the story is about
b.     Brainstorm
c.     Strong active verbs, specific descriptions, commas, line breaks, etc.
2.     Stories
a.      
                                               i.     Lead – Catchy first paragraph sets the tone and angle
                                             ii.     Quotes – (Statements) Opinion is expressed using the exact words of participant
                                            iii.     Transitions – (Details) Provides specific facts about the event: When, where, how.
                                            iv.     Conclusion – Final Paragraph of a story that might refer back to the lead.
b.      
3.     Good Writing
a.     Feature stories, people, places, and events.
b.     Active voice, and action verbs.
c.     Be specific
d.     Be the narrative form to offer
Read the article by Mallory Summers & see all the components working together

Writing effective headlines requires creativity, effort, and attention to details
What can you take from this page to help in writing creative headlines?
            ~ Study all the photos, and list words and ideas that spark.
Describe the 3-step process to writing dynamic headlines
1.     List key words and relate to the topic
2.     Brainstorm with rhyming words that have strong story telling merit
3.     Create words and phrases that creatively capture the story

Captions                        
1.     Content
a.     Add to what is obvious in the caption
b.     Know the five W’s and H
c.     Contact people in photos for mini interviews
d.     Not all captions need quotes
2.     Describe the 3-step process to writing captions
a.     Gather info to explain the photograph. Have quality questions and get quality answers. (Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How)
b.     Create a verbal/ visual connection by brainstorming a list of attention getting words for the caption.
c.     Summary Caption:  detailed caption in present tense describing the action
Expanded Caption: emphasize how and why.

Photography
We will be discussing this section in class


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