LEVEL 1 (9 to ll-year-olds) Things to Learn Things to Do Radio and Television What is "news?" 1. Listen to local and national news (Radio and Televisi

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OBJECTIVES OF THE COMMUNICATIONS PROJECT 1. To deveiop an appreciation for newspapers, radio, and teievision as mass media forms of communication. 2. To iearn how news is gathered, organized, and presented through newspapers, radio, and teievision. 3. To develop communication skiiis. ( 4. To explore newswriting and broadcast journaiism as possibie careers. EXTENSION RESOURCE MATERIALS 1. 4-H Communications: Newswriting 2. 4 H Communications: Radio and Teievision NOTE, " This project pianning guide is based in part on information inciuded in the two project manuais which are avaiiabie from your county Extension office.i This project is not considered appropriate for most youths ages 9 11.

LEVEL 1 (9 to ll-year-olds) Things to Learn Things to Do Radio and Television What is "news?" 1. Listen to local and national news (Radio and Television p. 3) programs on your radio or television. What are the differences between the news covered by your local station and the news covered by the network program? Three types of radio broad- 2. Listen to your radio station and casts. (Radio and Television try to find a program with each of p. 3-4) the three types of broadcasts. What are the differences between the three? What is a throw-away?" 3. Listen to your local news program (Radio and Television p. 3) on a radio station. Note the throw-aways that they use. How to use a tape recorder. 4. Get a tape recorder and practice (Radio and Television p. 5) using it. Talking into a microphone. 5. Experiment with talking into a (Radio and Television p. 4) microphone pluged into a tape recorder. Talk with the micro phone in different positions in relationship to you. Developing your speaking 6. Read the 4-H Member Manual Public ability. Speaking and You. (Radio and Television p. 3) Participate in the 4-H Public Speaking Program. Developing your ability to 7. Give a 4-H demonstration to your show and explain things. club or at County Activity Day. (Radio and Television p. 5-8) What are "public service 8. Listen to your local radio or announcements?" television station. Note how many public service announcements are made during one hour.

Level 2 (12- to l4-years-old) Things to Learn Things to Do Newswriting What is "news?" (Newswriting p. 3) What is a lead?" (Newswriting p. 3) The five "W's" and the "H." (Newswriting p. 3-4) Read your local newspaper to see what it considers newsworthy. Cut out at least 10 leads from an old newspaper. Circle these parts in the 10 leads that you cut out of an old newspaper. Write a lead containing the five "N's" and the "H." The ABC's" of newswriting. (Newswriting p. 3-6) Find stories in your newspaper that lack one or more of the "ABC's." Look for retractions in your newspaper. They will point out inaccuracies. Read your stories after you have written them. Check to see that names are spelled correctly and the facts in your story are easily understood. The differences between news stories (advance and follow up stories) and feature stories. (Newswriting p. 3-6) The inverted pyramid style of writing important facts first. (Newswriting p. 5) The importance of timeliness to a story. (Newswriting p. 5-6) Find an advance story, a follow-up story and a feature story in your local newspaper. Compare the stories. How are they different? How are they alike? Look at stories in your local paper. Notice how they develop a story starting with the most important thing that happened and then working their way down to lesser important things. Notice the dates included in stories in your local newspaper.

10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Things to Learn Things to Do The importance of short paragraphs. The use of action verbs. The use of quotes. (Newswriting p. 4-6) The use of photographs. (Newswriting p. 6) Story appeal. (Newswriting p. 4 5) Writing a good news story. (Newswriting p. 3-6) What is "copy?" (Newswriting p. 7) 10. 11. 12. 13. Look at the stories in your local paper. Notice the length of the paragraphs in the stories. Notice the types of verbs that are used in the stories that appear in your local newspapers. Notice how quotes are used in stories that appear in your local newspaper. Look for stories that include photographs. What do the photo graphs do for the stories? Look for stories in your local paper that appeal to you. Why do they appeal to you? Look for stories that do not interest you. Why don't they appeal to you? Write news stories about club events and school events using the things that you have learned in the Newswriting Project. 15. How to prepare your copy. (Newswriting p. 7) 15. Prepare your news stories in the manner described in the Member Manual. Submit your stories to your local newspaper in this manner. 16. Meeting deadlines. 16. Check with the editor of your local paper to find out what the deadlines are for getting a story into an issue of your paper. 17. The role of an editor. (Newswriting p. 5-7) 17. After you have sent stories into a newspaper and had them printed, check to see if your story has been changed. Look at any changes that have been made. How have they affected your story? If your stories have been changed in many places, talk with the editor of your paper to find out how you can better write your story.

( Level 3 (15- to 19-years-old) Things to Learn Things to Do Newswriting M 1. What is "news? 1. 2. How to interview people. 2. (Newswriting p. 6) ( 3. Feature story writing. 3. (Newswriting p. 5-6) 4. The proportion of a 4. newspaper devoted to news, pictures, editorials, comics, and advertisements. 5. How newspapers are financed. 5. 6. How copy is typeset and laid 6. out. Compare two or more newspapers that serve the same area, such as The News and Observer and The Wilson Daily Times or The Winston- Salem Journal and The Kernersville News for at least two weeks. Are the same things considered news by both papers? Do different stories make the front page of the two papers on the same day? Interview members of your family or 4-H Club as if you were going to write a story about them. Interview someone interesting that you know. Write a feature story based on that interview. Figure out the amount of space in your local paper that is devoted to each of the five sections mentioned in the things to learn. Talk to the publisher of your local newspaper. Find out how much of the newspaper is financed through advertisements, and how much of the newspaper is financed through subscriptions and sales at news stands. Visit your local newspaper. Visit the typesetting and composition sections and see how they perform their jobs.

Things to Learn Things to Do Careers with a newspaper. The importance of your local newspaper to your community. Meet with employees of your local newspaper. Find out what jobs there are with the newspaper and what training is needed to get those jobs. If one job interests you, spend some time with an employee who does that job. Take a survey of the people in your community to find out how many read the paper and how important the paper is to them. Radio and Television How to conduct a radio interview. (Radio and Television p. 4) How to write a radio script. (Radio and Television p. 3-4) Write a television script. (Radio and Television p. 7) Meeting deadlines. (Radio and Television p. 4) The difference between a television station and a cable television station. How to use videotape equipment. Listen to an interview show on your local radio station. After listening to the interview program try to interview a friend using the same style as the interviewer did on the radio program. Write a script based on an activity that your club has done or will be doing in the future. Write a television script dealing with something that interests you. Contact the station managers at your local radio and television stations and find out what their deadlines are for PSA's and news. Visit a local television station and a cable television station. What are the differences? Visit someone who will let you learn how to use videotape equipment.

Things to Learn Things to Do How to make call-in reports. (Radio and Television p. 5) Make a call in report on some event that you are covering. The use of visuals in television. (Radio and Television p. 6 8) Collect or prepare some visuals that you could use on a television program. Planning and preparing a radio program. (Radio and Television p. 3-4) With the help of your 4 H agent or local radio station manager prepare a program for use on your local radio station. 10. Planning and preparing a television program. (Radio and Television p. 5 6) 10. With the cooperation of your 4-H agent and local television station manager plan and prepare a television program. 11. The importance of rehearsal. (Radio and Television p. 4-7) 11. Before you present the program that you have planned, rehearse it. Use a mirror, tape recorder, or friends as an audience when you rehearse. 12. Dressing properly for television. (Radio and Television p. 8) 12. Dress properly when you are appearing on television. 13. Camera presence. (Radio and Television p. 8) l3. Practice giving your talk so that you are prepared to look into the camera and look professional. 14. Careers in radio, television, and cable television. 14. Visit with employees of your local radio, television, or cable television station. Find out what their jobs are and what training is required to have those jobs. If one job interests you, spend some extra time with someone who is in that job. Find out what job openings would be available in your area and what the pay scale is for those jobs.

Prepared by Roger J. Doherty, Former Extension 4-H Media Coordinator- Editor, and Jim'my C. Tart, Senior Publications Editor Published by THE NORTH CAROLINA AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE North Carolina State University at Raleigh, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University at Greensboro. and the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Cooperating. State University Station. Raleigh. N. 0.. Chester D. Black. Director. Distributed in furtherance of the Acts of Congress of May 8 and June 30. 1914. The North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service offers its programs to all eligible persons regardless of race. color, or national origin, and is an equal opportunity employer. 10 82-1.ZM (Reprint) 4H PG-Z-13