Editorial Writing
Editorial Writing
What is an Editorial?
It is the official stand of the publication on a relevant development or issue. It is a concerted commentary written by
any member of the editorial staff who comments or gives the newspaper’s or staff’s opinion on an issue which is of interest
and importance to the public.
The editorial is considered the soul of the newspaper for it stirs the conscience of the readers to action; it influence
and molds public opinion. It is usually written in formal language, expressing the stand of the paper on controversial issues of
the day. It has no byline.
TYPES OF EDITORIAL
Informative – are those which just give information, review, or announce certain facts or events.
Interpretative – those which explain or bring out the significance of an event, situation, or idea
Editorials of crusade and reform – those which criticize certain conditions, then suggest a solution or
change; or which just give a message of reform without necessarily pointing out a problem or a bad
condition.
Editorials on special occasions – those which are written to give meaning to occasions such as Christmas,
Labor Day, heroes’ birthday, and other significant events.
Editorial liners– short, witty paragraphs, either serious
or light.
Editorials that offer entertainment – those which are written to give in a light vein, primarily to
entertain readers.
Editorials of tribute – commemorating someone who’s worth emulating.
Editorials that praise or commend – those that express appreciation for a
worthy action.
PARTS OF EDITORIAL
The beginning
The body and
The conclusion
HOW TO WRITE AN EDITORIAL
1. Introduction
Contains the newspeg with the reaction. It is usually one short paragraph.(A newspeg is a brief statement
about the news event upon which the editorial is based or an existing issue that needs to be solved right away)
2. Body
It may take two to four short paragraphs that support or justify the reaction. Cite reasons, statistics,
interviews, or figures.
3. Ending
The ending, sometimes called the clincher, summarizes the editorial’s stand. It must be crispy and difficult to
forget.
The Beginning: Editorial Lead
The editorial lead, like in the news story, is the showcase of the write-up. However, it is not considered the heart of the
story unlike in the news.
The heart could be in the middle or at the end, depending upon the whims and style of the editorial writer.
Remember that it must contain enough “sparks” to urge the readers to read the whole article. A flat, dull and dragging
lead will readily turn readers away.
It does not have to follow the traditional five W’s and one H.
The editorial writer has more freedom to display his creativity than the news writer in the writing of the lead.
The Body
-The body should include the editorial’s basic facts, the causes and effects behind incidents, situations, illustrations and
arguments.
The Conclusion
-The last part drives home the final important thought or direction. This conclusion may be in the form of advice, challenge,
command or just a rounding out or a simple summary.
TIPS FOR WRITING
1. Simple style
Avoid high fallutin’ words
Learn to develop a simple, clear, direct and vigorous style of writing
Choose your words that will accurately describe or explain a point or issue
2. Brief, exact & concise
150 to 200 words
Complex sentences and long paragraphs are wearisome and dull the senses
3. One-editorial, one-point rule
Focus on a theme
Always have one point to convey to the readers
Several points confuse the readers
4. Be specific
Use concrete facts and figures not general ideas, terms or statements
Hazy and broad generalizations do not impress
E d ito ria l W ritin g
Intro:
Present the
problem or
situation.
Take a stand!
Present Recap
a logical the staff
solution. stance.
FEATURE WRITING
FEATURE STORY
a. CREATIVE sometimes SUBJECTIVE article, designed primarily TO ENTERTAIN and TO INFORM readers of an
event, a situation or an aspect of life; it is often NOT PERISHABLE.
b. is NOT a news story written in an inverted pyramid structure, it is not a fiction story for most features deal with
facts, it does not provide opinion like an editorial.
c. appeals to the emotion, it also instructs, informs and advices but its main objective is to entertain.
d. presents information of human interest. It aims to entertain rather to inform although it may do both at the same
time.
e. displays the three ‘S’ qualities: storyline, surprise & style
Narrative Lead
Put central character into a scene and begins telling a story.
Example: They pulled the car to the side of the road, turned off the motor and waited silently as the memories washed
over them in a series of gentle waves…(Tom Hallman, 3/8/1990)
Summary Lead
Symbolized the story's central theme.
Example: Hidden beneath a heap of inner-tubes in a tiny storeroom on an island in the middle of Vistula River in the
statue of Lenin that stood for decades inside the Gdansk Shipyard…(6/18/1991)
Contrast Lead
Draws contrast between two opposite extremes – tragedy with comedy, past with present, age with youth and beauty
with ugly.
Example: Less than three years ago, two college friends decided to build a website to exchange their favorite videos.
Today, Youtube is owned by Google and gets over 25 million unique visitors to the site each month.
Comparison Lead
Draws comparison between two subjects.
Suspense/Teaser Lead
An open-ended beginning
Example: The only thing Manny lacks to be considered as the best boxer ever is…
2. Body-
The essential ingredient of a good feature story is extensive, thorough research.
Quotes and descriptions.
Observation, take down notes.
3. Conclusion- ties the story together (summary).
Several ways to end a feature –
1. Lead replay or summary ending
2. Proximity ending
3. Restatement ending
4. Word play ending
5. Quote ending
6. Surprise ending
Steps in Writing Feature Story
1. Choose a topic which you know very well.
2. Limit your subject to only one area.
3. Think of a more interesting & fresh angle of the topic.
4. Make a tentative title.
5. Make an outline.
6. Use an appropriate & striking novelty lead.
7. Garnish your article with anecdote, dialogue and color.
8. Use graphic description. Don’t just tell, show it through the use of senses.
9. Place direct quotation in the beginning.
10. Use simple words & shorter paragraphs.
11. Avoid being wordy.
12. Make sure your article has drama.
13. Give examples to make your article convincing & easy to understand.
14. Tie up ending with the opening paragraph.
15. Make a striking title.
SCIENCE JOURNALISM
(NEWS, FEATURES, EDITORIALS)
SCIENCE STORIES
1. Science fair
2. School events
3. Local science community
4. Make the process of learning science newsworthy
EUREKA (pagtuklas at pananaliksik)
- scientific breakthroughs and research outcomes (S&T discoveries)
EXPERTS (mga dalubhasa) – scientists and technologists and their feats
SCIENTIFIC EVENTS (mga pangyayari)
- fora, exhibits, seminars and conferences
SCIENCE ISSUES (isyu patungkol sa agham)
– Problems affecting S&T, crises and disasters
SCIENCE HOW-Tos (hakbang o direksyon)
– tips on procedures and applications
STYLES OF WRITING
Straight news –5 W’s and H, use summary lead, facts-laden
Features – human interest angle, use novelty lead
Interpretative – more in-depth, and multi-angles, more complex and multi-sourced
SCIENCE FEATURES
BODY OF SH ARTICLE
It contains the flesh of the article, the well-chosen facts.
Observe the following:
a. unity of thought
b. coherence in ideas presented
c. emphasis on the priority facts
END/CONCLUSION
TIPS:
1. MAKE AN INTERESTING YET EASY TO COMPREHEND TITLES/HEADLINES
2. USE SUBTITLES THAT WILL SERVE AS KEY POINTS
3. USE TRANSITIONAL DEVICE TO LOGICALLY CONNECT IDEAS TO OTHER
4. DO NOT OVER EMPHASIZED, BE FACTUAL AND OBJECTIVE
5. USE STATISTICS BY RESPECTED INSTITUTIONS, EXPERTS SAYINGS
6. MAKE A CLEAR ANALYSIS OF DATA
7. ALWAYS LOCALIZE IDEAS, CONNECT CONCLUSION TO YOUR INTRODUCTION