Hit the Headlines: Exciting journalism activities for improving writing and thinking skills

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Routledge, May 16, 2012 - Education - 192 pages

Hit the Headlines charts out a series of fun and inspiring, cross-curricular journalism workshops that enhance key skills and confidence in areas such as:

  • Writing and editing.
  • Critical assessment.
  • Interviewing and observation.
  • Mental flexibility and resourcefulness.
  • Role-playing and teamwork.

This book will enable teachers of 9 – 15 year-olds to involve their students in a number of effective and well-tested exercises, games and scenarios, which will encourage them into enthusiastically seeking out and gaining further knowledge in areas such as news, journalism, social issues, IT, data assessment, ‘intelligent observation’, and enhanced questioning and listening. This is ‘organic learning’ at its best!

An introduction to the theory behind the book summarises short and long term learning outcomes which your students can achieve through these methods, explaining why scenarios which feel ‘real’ can immerse students and inspire them to achieve greater proficiency. The author also flags up particular aspects of the book which encourage readers to read and use it systematically, as well as to take on specific challenges themselves in order to better assist their students in the writing and editing challenges it contains.

Practical photocopiable templates for many chapters are provided, which can be used as classroom (and out-of classroom) exercises, examples and solutions to exercises. Through these engrossing journalistic scenarios, students will learn how to critically assess levels of ‘interest and importance’ of diverse facts, and so begin to understand that report or presentation writing of any sort involves sequencing a critical balance between these two factors.

Readers and users of this book can go on to customise their own scenarios, drawing on the stimulating techniques outlined to improve their students’ factual writing and related thinking skills. In particular, classroom teachers in primary, middle and secondary schools and all literacy co-ordinators will find this book extremely useful, as well as students studying for PGCEs and NQTs.

 

Contents

1 Introduction and theory
1
Please read this
5
3 Sequencing is the secret
8
4 The shape of a news story
19
A few ideas to make it more informal and informative
22
A journalism game
29
Scenarios that teach effectively because they are so absorbing
55
A dramatic way to learn
60
11 Challenging Changes
89
Creating exciting live journalism exercises
109
13 More about creating news scenarios and some we made earlier
118
How journalism is developed village gossip and some exercises to raise awareness of deliberate and accidental bias in language
133
15 Beyond print journalism in educational settings
137
16 A few suggestions for making a project newspaper
141
17 Headlines and headline games
145
Adapting journalism techniques to enrich any educational project
168

9 Writing and editing the group scenario stories
78
10 A subediting challenge
83
Glossary of journalistic and workshop terms
174
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About the author (2012)

Colin Macfarlane is an educational consultant, writer, professional performing poet and ex-journalist. He has had considerable experience over the past 20 years in developing and running a great number of highly acclaimed writing workshops in schools, and intensive residential courses around the country.

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