1 / 5

PHASE 2: FRONT PAGE LAYOUT

PHASE 2: FRONT PAGE LAYOUT. Phase 2: Front Page. Go to Micosoft Publisher : You are going to select a newspaper template Focus only on your front page: What is the Name of your newspaper? The Date of your birth Index

nodin
Download Presentation

PHASE 2: FRONT PAGE LAYOUT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PHASE 2: FRONT PAGE LAYOUT

  2. Phase 2: Front Page • Go to Micosoft Publisher : You are going to select a newspaper template • Focus only on your front page: • What is the Name of your newspaper? • The Date of your birth • Index • It can have any other text features you see in other newspapers that you want to add • YOU NEED TO MAKE THIS PAPER LOOK LIKE IT IS REAL, SO TAKE A LOOK AT NEWSPAPER FRONT COVERS SO YOU CAN GET AN IDEA

  3. Phase 2: Front Page Continued • Here you will focus on the two main stories. • Your main stories should be important enough to be on your front page. • Each story must have a heading, a picture, the name of the writer and a headshot to go along with it • Each article must be three to four paragraphs (column format) in length and must be in your own words. • Newspaper articles generally give the five Ws in the first paragraph and then that information is explained in more detail in subsequent paragraphs (inverted pyramid). You will also need a picture to use with your main story.

  4. INVERTED PYRMAID • Journalist put the most important news at the beginning and then include the less important details as they write. • These skillful writers try to put the who, what, when, where, why, and how (5 W's and H) at the beginning. They call this part the "lead." Then they add the rest of the details in the order of their importance. The least important information they put at the end.

  5. EXAMPLE Tallahassee - A Tangelo County fourth-grader won this year's annual Florida State Spelling Bee yesterday when he spelled the word paraphernalia correctly. He is the youngest student to win the contest in its 50-year history. For his effort, Larry Johnson, a ten year-old honor student as Lemonline Elementary School, was awarded a $1,000 U.S. savings bond. In addition, he will receive an all-expense-paid trip to Washington, D.C. to represent the state of Florida in the National Spelling Bee, to be held in October. Runner-up in the contest was Tabitha Waters, an eighth-grader at Grapefruit Middle School in Baywater. Tabitha was eliminated when she misspelled ennui. She received a $500 U.S. savings bond. The winner of the National Spelling Bee will be awarded a $20,000 college scholarship to attend a college or university of his or her choice after completing high school. Students from 38 Florida counties took part in the three-day contest. Following the event, all 38 contestants were invited to dine at the Governor's Mansion. Larry is the son of Farley and Beth Johnson of Newtown. He has a sister, Linsey, who is an eighth-grade student at Newton Middle School, and a brother, Bruce, who is a first-grader at Lemonlime.

More Related