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+ News Article No opinion – Only the Facts

+ News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

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Page 1: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+

News Article

No opinion – Only the Facts

Page 2: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News Article

Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences

End Product:

News article base on an actual or imagined event of learner’s choice

Page 3: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News Article

Big Idea:

Strategic writers develop narratives in an organized manner so that readers can easily understand the experience or event.

Essential Question:

How can a strategic writer develop an narrative in such a way as to engage its reader while making it easy to understand?

Page 4: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News Article

Biblical Integration:

Many stories in the Bible such as David and Goliath, the fish and loaves of bread, and parables are examples of narratives.

Page 5: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News Article

Informative-narrative writing provides the reader with information that is educational, inspiration, or practical.

Journalism is a type of informative-narrative writing that is found in websites, newspapers, or magazines.

Journalism is different from an editorial. Unlike an editorial where the writer provides his opinion, journalism presents facts or events with minimal attempt to analyze or explain the information.

Page 6: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News ArticleWhat is a Narrative?

A narrative is some kind of retelling, often in words of something that happened. The narrative is not the story itself but rather the telling of the story -- which is why it is so often used in phrases such as "written narrative," "oral narrative," etc.

While a story just is a sequence of events, a narrative recounts those events, perhaps leaving some occurrences out because they are from some perspective insignificant, and perhaps emphasizing others.

In a series of events, a car crash takes a split second. A narrative account, however, might be almost entirely about the crash itself and the few seconds leading up to it.

Narratives thus shape history (the series of events, the story of what happened).

Page 7: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News Article

With Journalism it is important to remember to base writing on the 5 W’s and H: who, what, when, where, why, and how?

Examine a news article on smart-board and look for the 5 W’s and H. Use familiar words and define technical terms.

Page 8: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News ArticleThe Five W’s of the Article

Who

Alice Walton

What

Goal of Crystal Bridges Museum

Where

Bentonville, Arkansas

Why

To promote the highly-regarded museum

Page 9: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News ArticleTips for End Product Do not give opinion or analyze.

Write about a recent real or imagined event, so write on Saturday, not on Saturday, March30, 2013.

Write short paragraphs: one paragraph may be one sentence long.

Write only in third person unless using in a direct quote.

Headlines must be short, concise while grabbing the readers’ attention: Think short and to the point. Example: Bombing of Pearl Harbor, or Pearl Harbor bombed.

Evaluate you articles and headlines on USA Today App or New York Times App etc.

Page 10: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+End Product Task Analysis Students will choose a topic for their news article: It

may be real or imagined.

Jot down the 5 W’s and How. Do a little fact checking or research if necessary.

Write headline.

Write lead paragraph: 1-2 sentences.

New article should be 8-12 sentences 4-6 paragraphs

No more than 4-6 “to be” verbs.

Watch out for vague and overused words as well.

Use checklist on mrscaple.com

Graded by Rubric on next slide

Page 11: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+News Article Rubric

Advanced Proficient Developing Inadequate

The learner writes a narrative to develops real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.

The learner writes a narrative to develops real or imagined experiences or events but could use more effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.

The learner writes a narrative and somewhat develops real or imagined experiences or events but needs effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.

The learner writes a narrative but does not develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.

W.8.3: Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.

Page 12: + News Article No opinion – Only the Facts. + News Article Objective: The learner will write a narrative to develop a real or imagined experience or event

+End Product Development Schedule – Upload by Wed. April 9 Monday – Evaluate a news article and show end-

product specifications

Tuesday – Choose Topic, headline, and 5 W’s

Wednesday – Write draft of article

Thursday – Read draft of article for classmate’s analysis and suggested improvements.

Friday - – Read draft of article for classmate’s analysis and suggested improvements and write final Copy