The ABCs set your standards. Now here's the toolkit that gets you all the facts before you write a single sentence.
Last chapter, you learned the four qualities of good news writing.
Accuracy. Brevity. Clarity. Ethics.
Those qualities tell you how to write. They set your standards.
But here's the thing. Before you write a single sentence, you need facts. Real, specific, verified facts.
And to get the right facts, you have to ask the right questions.
That's what this chapter is about.
Here's a short news paragraph. Every single question is answered inside it. Read it, then check the table below.
Let's remove just one piece β the When. Read the paragraph again.
Something feels off, right? We still don't know when this happened. Was it yesterday? Last week? Last year? Without the When, readers can't tell if this story is current.
Read each sentence and tap which question it answers. Then click Reveal to check.
Find the missing piece in each sentence, then fill in the news using your own words.
"The Student Council of Maliwanag Elementary organized a school-wide clean-up drive last Friday morning at the school grounds and nearby basketball court. The activity aimed to prepare the campus for the upcoming Brigada Eskwela. Participants helped by sweeping classrooms, picking up trash along pathways, and repainting fences around the school."
| What to Check | Done β | Try Again π |
|---|---|---|
| I filled in all five planner rows | β | β |
| Each blank answers the correct question | β | β |
| My sentences are clear and easy to read | β | β |
| My answers are specific β not vague | β | β |
Answers for writing activities will be different for each student. Use the rubric to check your work or ask your teacher for help.
Read each detail from a news story. Tap which of the 5Ws or 1H it answers.
You've got your six questions. Now learn exactly where each answer goes in your article β and why the most important fact always comes first.