News Basics (The Easy Stuff)
Writing & Design
Rules & Ethics (Keeping it Real)
100

These are the "5 Ws" (and one H) every reporter needs to answer in their story.

What are Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How?

100

This writing style puts the most important info at the top and the tiny details at the bottom

What is the Inverted Pyramid

100

This is the #1 rule of journalism: making sure all your facts are 100% correct

What is accuracy

200

This is the big, bold title at the top of a news story that grabs your attention.

What is a headline?

200

This is a short description under a photo that explains what’s happening in the picture

What is a caption (or cutline)?

200

This is the big "no-no" where you copy someone else's work and say you wrote it.

What is plagiarism

300

This is the name of the person who wrote the article, usually found right under the headline

What is a byline

300

This is a story that isn't just "hard news"—it's more like a human-interest story about a person or a hobby.

What is a feature story

300

When a reporter lets their personal opinions change how they report a story, they're showing this.

What is bias?

400

This is the first sentence or paragraph of a news story that summarizes the whole thing.


 What is a lead (or lede)?


400

When you write down exactly what someone said and put it in your story, you're using one of these.

What is a quote?

400

  This Amendment in the Bill of Rights protects the "freedom of the press."

What is the First Amendment?

500

This is the specific topic or area a reporter covers all the time, like "sports" or "school lunch."

What is a beat?

500

This is the time by which a reporter must turn in their story, or they’re in big trouble.

What is a deadline

500

This is the "fake stuff"—when a reporter just makes up facts or quotes that never happened

What is fabrication