The first site firefox directs me to has very good advice for me:
Let's read that again:This is the crux of all news - you need to know five things:
Who? What? Where? When? Why? How?
According to same website "Writing news stories isn't particularly difficult." Apparently, writing tutorials is ;)This is the crux of all news - you need to know five things:
1. Who?
2. What?
3. Where?
4. When?
5. Why?
6. How?
So, on went my speed search on how to write a news story. Here are some promising tips I found:
- Start with a good lead. The first sentence(s) should contain the most important information and hook your readers. The rest of the article elaborates on that. This is called the inverted pyramid method. Helpful: imagine an editor will cut off the last paragraph or even reduce the story to only two paragraphs, and ask yourself: Is what I deem most important still in the story?
- Answer the who, what, where, when, why and how questions. A good story contains the answers to all, preferably in the lead.
- Be objective. Only present facts, no conclusions, and definitely no opinions. If there are more sides to the story, present all.
- Assume that the reader has no prior knowledge.
- Write in short, clear sentences.
- A paragraph shouldn't contain more than three sentences.
- Quote people to liven up your story.
Sources: mediacollege.com, mediacareers.about.com, www.ehow.com, newspaper-journalism.suite101.com, ezinearticles.com, explorewriting.co.uk (includes nice example of changing the order of presented facts!)
Now on to practice!

