Not everything that happens is worth reporting. Find out what makes a story truly newsworthy.
Think about your day so far.
You woke up. You ate breakfast. You fixed your bag.
Normal stuff, right?
Now imagine this. Your teacher walks in and says, "Class is suspended tomorrow because of a typhoon."
Suddenly, everyone wants to know more. That's news.
So what makes something news? That's exactly what you'll find out in this chapter.
Simple, right? But here's the tricky part. Not every real event is news. A lot of things happen around you every day — most of them are not news.
Timely means the event just happened — or is about to happen soon. Old news is not news anymore. If something happened two years ago and nothing changed, it's not worth reporting today.
"Typhoon Carina signal raised this morning."
"There was a typhoon three years ago."
A news element is a quality that makes an event worth reporting. There are four main news elements. Every story needs at least one of these — plus timeliness.
Let's apply the formula to two real scenarios. Can you see the difference?
Apply what you learned. Work through the activities below step by step.
| What to Check | Done ✅ | Try Again 🔄 |
|---|---|---|
| My event is a real, specific happening | ☐ | ☐ |
| I wrote whether it is timely | ☐ | ☐ |
| I named at least one news element | ☐ | ☐ |
| I explained in one sentence why it is or isn't news | ☐ | ☐ |
Answers will differ for each student. Use the rubric above or ask your teacher for help.
Tap the correct answer for each scenario using the formula you learned.
You know what news is. Now find out what news writing actually is — and why it matters way more than most people think.