Vocabulary (2) to learn

Structure of News Articles Analysis

1. Check the credentials or background of the journalist who wrote the article you are going to read if possible. Ask yourself the following questions: Is the author a famous person? Is he/she known for biases? Does he belong to a particular political party or organization? Is the person writing a personal opinion that is only acceptable in an editorial or op-ed column, or is this a factual account of the news?

2. Study the structure of the inverted pyramid that many journalists use. Look at the headline. Does it give you an idea of what the article should be about? Read the first paragraph, known as the lead. Look for the main point of the story and/or a summary of the major ideas. See if the lead gets you interested in reading the article. Look for the lesser important materials that generally follow.

3. Look for the 5 W's. These answer Who? What? Where? When? and Why? Jot these
down in your notebook to help you get the main point of the article. Refer to this list as you read the remainder of the article. Emphasize the "Who". Who is the focus of the story? Think about the "What." What happened to the person to make the story newsworthy?

4. Check for fact and opinion. A news article should be factual with statistics, proven studies and authorities backing up a claim. An opinion article, one based on emotion or personal experience, does not belong in a news article. Learn to distinguish between the two.

5. Look for conflicts or issues being discussed. Ask yourself if the writer is educating you with the facts or if he is trying to get you to think a certain way or follow a given action. Look at both sides of the argument. Consider the solutions proposed if he gives any. Was there enough information to support the ideas?

6. Study the graphs or pictures if there are any. Ask yourself if they are clear. Do they adequately and fairly represent the news they are supposed to be illustrating? Make sure the pictures are not cropped to eliminate some unfavorable material.

7. Make a list of unfamiliar words in your notebook. Look them up in the dictionary. Reread the sentences that contain them to reinforce the definitions.

8. Look at another newspaper with the same news article. Check to see if there are similarities in their treatment. Analyze the differences before accepting either one as correct.

Vocabulary (2) to learn

a skill that can be acquired
be objective
read the material objectively
personal opinions and biases
a prudent reader
adequately
to influence a reader's attitude
to uncover the journalistic techniques
an editorial or op-ed column
a factual account of the news
the inverted pyramid
headline
lead
to make the story newsworthy
to back up a claim
to distinguish
to get you to think a certain way
discussed conflicts or issues
to propose solutions
to look at both sides of the argument
to support the ideas
to eliminate some unfavorable material
treatment

The Plan of Rendering Newspaper Article

1. The headline of the article is... (The article is headlined..., The headline of the article I've read is...)
2. The author of the article is...
3. The article is taken from the newspaper...
4. The central idea of the article is about... (The main idea of the article is... the article is devoted to... the article deals with... the article touches upon... the purpose of the article is to give the reader some information on... the aim of the article is to provide a reader with some material on...)
5. Give a summary of the article (no more than 10-20 sentences).
6. State the main problem discussed in the article and mark off the passages of the article that seem important to you.
7. Look for minor peculiarities of the article.
8. Point out the facts that turned out to be new for you.
9. Look through the text for figures, which are important for general understanding.
10. State what places of the article contradict your former views.
11. State the questions, which remained unanswered in the article and if it is possible add your tail to them.
12. Speak on the conclusion the author comes to.
13. Express your own point of view on the problem discussed.


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