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Published byShanon McBride Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 3 Deciding What is News
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News Judgment You have to find what’s out there Important vs. not important News judgment is something we develop over time How do we here at O’Gorman decide what is newsworthy? Strive for timeliness, proximity, prominence
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The “Who Cares” Method We need to ask who really cares about the story If no one cares, then why report? Examine p. 61 Strive for good taste Don’t just spread the ugly news
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The Elements of News News judgment is intuitive The following are ways to assess what is and isn’t newsworthy
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The Elements of News (cont.) Timeliness How new is the news? Not good to cover football in January Need to focus on advance items Proximity Nearness of a given event Stick with local news
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The Elements of News (cont.) Prominence Newsworthiness of an individual or organization Part of why the press follows movie stars and celebrities Consequence The importance of the event Localization – national meets local What are some scenarios where this happens?
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The Elements of News (cont.) Human Interest Other people and how they behave Laugh, cry, feel emotion Unusual stories Conflict Anything that involves tension, surprise, and suspense
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The Elements of News (cont.) Other factors Progress, money, disaster, novelty, oddity, emotions, drama, animals, children Look at the chart on p. 67
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Generating News Stories Must meet as an editorial board Process at O’Gorman Students meet in small groups Large group puts all stories together Students select final stories Students given stories to write
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Brainstorming Sessions Throw out story ideas Assign the stories Allow board time to think and debate Someone needs to record No idea is bad Look carefully over suggestions
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Using polls We need a good sample 200 out of 750 is a good sample Need a fair sample All grades – male and female Have a good sample size
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Questions Creating Survey Questions Must have well-written questions No loaded language “John is clever” v. “John is sly” Filter Questions You can filter someone out with questions “Do you smoke?”
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Asking the right questions Don’t confuse the person responding Don’t ask freshmen if they believe teachers should have tenure – WHY?
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Publishing Poll Results Must be done in a timely manner Don’t draw conclusions Let the reader draw conclusions
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Ready to start generating story ideas?
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