YEARBOOK! Reflections

Similar documents
Yearbook Staff Application

Raider Yearbook Application

2013 NFPW HIGH SCHOOL COMMUNICATIONS CONTEST GUIDELINES

YOU WILL NEED TO: 1. Decide on your topic (this will be done in class).

Ten Steps to Writing an Outstanding Article

HOW TO GENERATE PUBLICITY FOR YOUR NATIONAL SCIENCE WEEK EVENT

Young Reporters Scotland

13A COMMUNICATIONS LODGE NEWSLETTERS: ADVANCED TUTORIAL TRAINER PREPARATION SESSION NARRATIVE. Order of the Arrow 13A 1 Boy Scouts of America

HOW TO WRITE YOUR PERSONAL STATEMENT:

SENIOR PHOTOS DUE FRIDAY 11/3 SENIOR PACKETS ARE DUE FRIDAY

Rubric for On-Demand Narrative Writing Second Grade Points Score

JAMES SWANWICK S CUT AND PASTE SYSTEM FOR LANDING JOBS IN JOURNALISM

CUT! EARLIER AT LEAST

PLEASANTRIES: Be cool, be human, ask them about their day and how they are. Don t dive right in but be relaxed.

Yearbook Staff Application

PRESS RELEASE PRINT SHOP

COOPERATIVE EXTENSION UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Sonoma County 4-H OFFICER TRAINING MANUAL REPORTER DUTIES AND SUGGESTIONS

TABLE OF CONTENTS TOPIC AND THEME RESEARCHING THESIS CRAFTING AND ANALYSIS SHOW WHAT YOU KNOW FINAL TIPS

How to Start a Blog & Use It To Squash Writer s Block

Writing a Research Paper with Ease

Great Writing 1: Great Sentences for Great Paragraphs Peer Editing Sheets

From the Principal s Office Celebrations

PALOS VERDES PENINSULA HIGH SCHOOL THE PEN NEWSPAPER STAFF APPLICATION

Detailed Instructions for Success

ReadBox Project -Newspaper front page-

Writing the Diagnostic Essay

Introduction to Photojournalism

The Importance of Professional Editing

The Program Works. Photography

Human Interest Story/Photo/Video Contest 2018

Mr. Ditmore s Yearbook Classroom Procedures & Syllabus

News article Summary (succinct) lead; inverted pyramid structure; direct quotes.

Content Marketing Mastery

Novel Study Project Ideas

Would You Like To Earn $1000 s With The Click Of A Button?

Autobiography Project

How to write for The Conversation

You are going to be authors and illustrators!

How to Use Donor Newsletters to Raise More Money for Your Non-Profit

Would You Like To Earn $1000 s With The Click Of A Button?

Handling the Pressure l Session 6

Hey, what is a narrative anyway?

Writer s Guidelines: Articles and Projects

CyberDominance.com Author Guide

Click here to find out more about the book that will teach you how-to design presentations like the pros.

CONTESTS GUIDELINES. General

CHS Class of 2018 Senior Yearbook Information

Personal Narrative Essay Assignment

Pillar Content Blog Mastermind Web: Page: 1

ADVERTISING BOOKLET

Lower Elementary Family Projects

Mini 4-H Photography. Whitley County Mini 4-H. Whitley County Mini 4-H

Resume Writing Tips 1. Know the purpose of your resume 2. Back up your qualities and strengths 3. Make sure to use the right keywords

Academic job market: how to maximize your chances

Disclaimer: This is a sample. I was not hired to write this, but it demonstrates my writing style.

The Cover Letter. Introduce yourself. Describe what makes you the perfect fit for this job.

TABLE OF CONTENTS. Logging into the Website Homepage and Tab Navigation Setting up Users on the Website Help and Support...

CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY LESSON PLAN (Long Form)

background research word count Title SUBMISSION GUIDELINES FOR PUBLISHING SCIENCE FAIR WRITTEN WORK

BOOK REPORT ORGANIZER

The editing process gets your manuscript in shape for publication. Let s have a look at the main types of editing:

What is the PURPOSE of writing an introduction to your essay?

Hello! We re Radhika & Johnny from Fulltime Nomad.

OVERCOMING TEAM BUILDING OBJECTIONS

DEPARTMENT B DIVISION 147 BOOTHS Division 147 All Classes Pay Category 1 C) H Booth

Guide for lived experience speakers: preparing for an interview or speech

PUBLICITY. Five Rules of Good News

Revision Techniques. or how to pass exams

Project Objective: Each member of a group will assume one of these two positions; -A Danish Newspaper Reporter. -A Jewish citizen of Denmark

Essay Writing Workshop. Kristy Blue, Augustana College Annie Mills, University of Kansas Betsie Rugg-Stassen, Northern Arizona University

GRADE 7 TAKE HOME ASSESSMENT: Let s Create a VICTORIAN ENGLAND Scrapbook!

French writing self-beliefs questionnaire

#1) Focus and Hold Still

Vanderburgh County 4-H Project

Help the Media Tell Your (Challenge) Story

7 Major Success Principles for The Urban Entrepreneur

DiscovererFutureThinker esencerelatingachieving CaringCompetingConfiden pendabilitydiscovererfuture

DAY 4 DAY 1 READ MATTHEW 7:24-27 HEAR FROM GOD LIVE FOR GOD. If you play an instrument, you know that it takes a LOT of practice.

Writing the Personal Essay. Columbia College Workshop Callie Kitchen

FINISHING YOUR BOOK: EDITING AND PROOFING

colossus \kə-ˈlä-səs\ noun

WRITING COVER LETTERS & THANK YOU LETTERS

How to Be a Sought After In-Demand Expert Guest on Multiple Podcasts!

More Thinking Matters Too Understanding My Life Patterns

Module 9 Putting It All Together

THE WRITING PROCESS. There are four principal steps to the writing process: Prewriting, Drafting, Revising and Editing.

Your ReBAR Interview It s All About YOU

Interviewing 101. Brought to you by the MHS PTSA January 30, 2017

Acing Math (One Deck At A Time!): A Collection of Math Games. Table of Contents

FIRST GRADE FIRST GRADE HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS FIRST 100 HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS FIRST 100

Computer Literacy Mr. Bernard Phone: (503) Letter of Introduction Start a new word-processing document.

Speaking Notes for Grades 4 to 6 Presentation

AGE ACTION FUNDRAISING GUIDELINES

tape too. Are you interested in going with me? couldn t stack them very easily. Besides, grocery store boxes are

Writing Process Timeline Name Date St. # Writing Process Timeline Name Date St. #

GOAL SETTING NOTES. How can YOU expect to hit a target you that don t even have?

Letha Wilson Part I, Artists Space 1

Lantern Independent Study

Assembling Directions

On the GED essay, you ll need to write a short essay, about four

Transcription:

YEARBOOK! Reflections 2013-2014

WELCOME TO THE STAFF! ADVISER Mrs. Moon rebecca.moon@bufordcityschools.org EDITORS Ali Chambers Copy Editor Jordan Davis Design Editor Madi DiPietro Senior Section Editor (+ Senior Ads) Luke Simpson Photography Editor Rachel Stopper Business Editor (Ads, Money, etc.)

CAPTIONS First sentence is in present tense while describing what s going on in the photo.! The rest of the caption is past tense while giving more information, background information, quotes, and/or specific details.!

CAPTIONS 3-5 sentences per caption.! Caption is specific to the photo and answers who, what, when, where, why, and how. DETAILS!! Use a lead-in, which is the first 3-5 words that grab attention and link photo to rest of caption.! Deep in thought, Reading a book, Taking one last breath, Counting the seconds! Give extra background information (maybe something that happened before or after the photo was taken) that photo doesn t show or that the quote doesn t reveal. Make people want to read your caption!! You should have more details and background information given besides just a quote from someone.! Write creative sentences, and use varied structure of text.!

CAPTIONS Tells clearly what s going on in that specific photo; avoid stating the obvious.! Never say, Junior Jensen Toney is giving senior Abby Watkins a hug.! Instead, you say, Junior Jensen Toney gives senior Abby Watkins a hug.! Each person in the photo is labeled in the first sentence of the caption in order from left to right.! Make sure to have grade level and first and last name for each person SPELLED CORRECTLY!!! (Grade level is not capitalized unless it s the first word of the sentence).! Example: Junior Jensen Toney! After mentioning a student, use last name to reference them.! Example: Senior Bernard Castillo hits the ball over the net. Castillo had been playing for 5 years before he joined the team.!

CAPTIONS Use past tense when introducing the quote.! Example: Watkins commented, I miss Nichole so much because she is the coolest person I know.! Make sure to tell who is saying the quote.! Use a variety of different quote lead-ins.! Examples: Agreed, commented, shared, explained, stated, exclaimed! Quotes should not be generic. Dig deep!! Ask specific questions in the interview in order to have a better chance of getting an interesting quote.!

CAPTIONS Every photo has its own caption.! PROOFREAD. Don t rely on spell checker or your editors.! LOOK UP SPELLING OF NAMES!!!!!!! Never, ever assume. You will get points off for this. This matters because people matter!! Make sure the text is aligned the correct way.!

PICTURES Action:! First and foremost, all photos in the yearbook are action shots. DO NOT HAVE POSED PICTURES. We only use candid photos.! Photos are used to tell the story vividly.! If the picture doesn t grab your attention, it won t grab the reader s attention either.! Variation:! Take a variety of different shots at different angles. Have both horizontal and vertical shots to choose from!! Take more pictures than you need for your spread! The more you take, the better. You never know when you might need an extra photo! Make sure your spread has a variety of different photos, colors, and shapes.! Close-ups, far away shops, single shots, group shots! Have a variety of different people. Have diversity within your page!!

Posed, bad crop, boring, doesn t tell a story Cool angle, candid, makes reader curious as to what the photo is about, leading line BAD: GOOD: GOOD: BAD: Unexpected angle, creative, interesting, makes reader curious about the story No focus, hard to understand what s going on, boring, dark, bad crop

PICTURES Crops:! Crop excess background. There s no need for it!! Get creative! Don t crop each photo the same way. You can use cropping in an artistic way to make your spread more interesting.! Photo Credit:! LMP pictures don t need credit.! Photographers from our yearbook staff don t need credit.! Give credit to parents, teachers, or students that give you photos.! Dominant photo:! Goes with the copy story and headline.! Should be the best (in quality, color, and content) photo on the spread.! Ideally, the largest photo on the spread.!

Interesting angle, cool crop, close up, creative Posed, boring background, bad crop, boring GOOD: BAD: BAD: GOOD: Posed, doesn t tell a story, not an action shot, boring Good coverage, tells a story, candid, good quality, action shot

INTERVIEWS This is your homework. Research! You need to talk to as many people as you can to know your topic. Otherwise, your coverage could be biased or you could leave out important information.! Conduct original and creative interviews with questions specific to your topic. Come prepared with plenty of questions. We don t want generic quotes!! Don t be scared! Make the person you re talking to comfortable so you can get a good quote.! Coverage, coverage, coverage. It s always a goal in yearbook to include as many people in the book as possible. Don t interview students that you know are probably going to be in the book a bunch. Pick students that won t be in the book otherwise.! Go to the event. Go to practices. Go to rehearsals. You can t always rely on the McGregors or other people. Plus, you can conduct interviews with people personally or get a better view of your topic if you re there.!

COPY The copy is the main story on your spread.! Develop a feature angle on your topic. NO overviews are allowed; find a focus.! Example: If your page covers FCCLA and DECA, you could write your copy about one project FCCLA did this year. Get all the information, and cover that one event. Don t give an overview of the whole year or explain what the club is.! Remember that you will need a dominant photo for the copy; you will need to pick a story that will have interesting pictures to illustrate the story.! Pick a story that will allow for you to have good coverage avoid making your copy about one person.! On a sports spread, try to include as many of the players that are on the team as you can.! Think about your audience. What was important to the members of DECA this year? What was a big deal to the tennis players this year?!

Interesting story, Lots of details, gives original quotes, tells a good story, indepth, couldn t be in another yearbook, not generic

COPY No sentences should say this year because only events from this particular year should be recorded. Do NOT talk about what happens every year; we want interesting and unique things specific to this year and most importantly, our school.! Add life to your story with active voice and outstanding quotes.! Keep your opinions to yourself.! Remember, you re recording. Use past tense, 3 rd person, and specifics. Keep in mind that all different readers will look at your copy and captions people who know about your subject and others who don t.! Keep the fluff out! Don t add filler sentences to make copy appear longer. When you run out of exciting, creative things to include, you can stop.! Always paste copy and captions into Microsoft Word before pasting onto the spread to catch errors and misspellings.! Write in paragraphs, and break up the copy into 2 or 3 columns if needed.!

Original quotes, interesting story, digs deep

HEADLINES Headline: Our headlines will be a single creative word, with syllables separated by interpuncts, and the appropriate A will be in the yellow brackets. Sub-headline:! A connotative definition of whatever the event is.!

GRADES Staff Deadlines You must turn in a PRINTED copy of your finalized spread with a clean, attached rubric. Spreads count for test grades. You will get points off for errors. You are responsible for proofreading and catching mistakes. Your editors are there to help you, but you need to check the rubric to make sure you have everything as close to perfect as possible. Please feel free to have other staff members AND a Language Arts teacher look at your spread and make corrections/suggestions. Spreads will be 20 POINTS OFF for each day they re late. REMEMBER: Do not show your spread to any student who isn t on the Yearbook Staff. Yearbook is confidential!

STAFF DEADLINES Deadline One: October 28 th Deadline Two: November 22 nd Deadline Three: January 13 th Deadline Four: February 24 th Deadline Five: April 21 st