Final Review

multiple choice
1. Timeliness - How close in time a story is to the real-life event (recent)
2. Proximity - How close an event occurred to the people reading the story
3. Human Interest - How the story appeals to a people's common interests
4. Prominence - How professional the piece is and how much is is worthy of journalism (importance of person)
5. Conflict - a story when two or more things clash in opinions, words, or actions (2 sides go against each other)
word bank
6. Interviews - a journalist asks questions to their person they are interested about (get info from source)
7. Research - finding background information about an experience, person, etc. (to prepare for interview)
8. Quotations - the format a journalist puts a quote from the subject in (what you get from a source, direct and indirect)
9. Yes-no question - a question that is not open ended and can easily be responded to with yes or no
10. follow-up question - a question after a first question to clarify or add an interesting part (to get source to elaborate)
pair groups
11. Objective writing - writing that does not involve a journalist's opinion (no editorializing) - least amount of opinion
Multiple choice
12. Transition paragraph - paragraph between quotes that's used to transition into a new topic (links quotes together)
13. Hard news story - Very serious news that is imperative for people to know what's happening (timely and breaking news)
14. Soft news story - The articles like commentary, entertainment, lifestyles, etc. that are interesting but not "breaking news" (doesn't have timeliness, not breaking)
15. Inverted Pyramid - the structure a journalist uses for writing that consists of most important news first to least important or "fluffy" stuff last (structure for a hard news story)
16. Third-person point of view - a point of view not used with "I" statements that's used to be objective (he, she, they)
17. 5 Ws and H lead - the beginning of a lede that has: Who, what, when, where, why, and how to set up the story (use in lede hard news story)
18. editing - the process a journalist goes through to make changes to the story and make it better prepare (written material) for publication by correcting, condensing, or otherwise modifying it.
word bank
19. attribution - what a journalist gives credit to someone they've quoted (your source)
20. paraphrase - the process of not directly quoting, but summing up what a person says (indirect quote, summarize, and give credit)
 correct! 21. fragmentary quotation - a single word quote or short phrase
22. direct quotation - a quote quoted directly from the subject (word for word, exact quote)
incorrect 23. partial quotation -  a mix between a direct quote and paraphrasing
24. Uses of quotations  - (see below)
quotations are for feelings and emotions. should not be facts that you can write in a transition statement
25. When to use quotations - (see above)
26. When quotations are unnecessary or not desired - 
word bank/true false
27. Editorial - the opinion of newspaper as a whole on a subject (often decided by board - group of editors that decide stance of paper, always written in third person, opinion piece)
28. editorial page -  all opinions of a paper appear - always has staff box on it too
29. columns - written by one person and their p.o.v on a topic
30. editorial that criticizes - editorial that criticizes
31. editorial that explains - editorial that explains info
32. editorial that persuades - editorial that persuades
33. letter to the editor - the general public would write a letter to editor

Write 1 300 word news piece
1 300-400 word opinion piece
Also extra credit too

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