Chapter 3: Organizing and Planning Editorials — CampusJourn
Chapter 3

Organizing & Planning Editorials

Every great argument begins with a structural map. Learn how to outline, sequence your claims, and plan persuasive builds.

šŸŽÆ Chapter Objective: By the end of this chapter, you will be able to identify the three parts of an editorial and create a simple outline before you start writing.
Student structuring an editorial outline on paper drafts showing problem, cause, effect, and solution blocks

Last Time, You Got Stronger Opinions

In Chapter 2, you learned the difference between facts and opinions.

You practiced writing clear, confident position statements using the formula — [Who] should/must [do what] because [reason].

You know exactly what you want to say. Now here's the next question: How do you organize everything before you write it?

Here's What Happens Without a Plan

Imagine sitting down to write an editorial. You start writing the introduction. Suddenly, you realize you don't know what comes next. You add a random reason, then another, then completely forget to write a conclusion. Time is up.

The editorial is messy, jumps around, and doesn't feel finished. Now, imagine a different version: you take five minutes to plan first. You write down your position, list your two best reasons, and remind yourself how to end it. When you write, everything flows. You finish on time. The editorial makes sense from start to finish.

The difference is one simple thing: a plan. This chapter gives you that plan.

3.1 The Three Parts of Every Editorial

Every editorial — no matter the topic — is built on these three essential parts:

1. Introduction
The beginning. It has two jobs: tell the reader what the problem is, and state your clear, confident position immediately. By the end of this paragraph, readers must know exactly where you stand.
2. Body
The middle. This is the longest section where you explain your arguments, reasons, and supporting evidence — making your case one paragraph at a time.
3. Conclusion
The ending. It wraps up the editorial. It reminds readers of your position, summarizes the key points, and ends with a clear, specific call to action.

3.2 The Problem-Solution Structure

This is the most common, straightforward editorial structure. It works for almost any topic:

Introduction → Body 1 (Problem) → Body 2 (Why it matters) → Body 3 (Solution) → Conclusion

Example Outline: Covered Waiting Area

• Introduction: Problem: Students wait outside after school with no shelter. Position: The school must build a covered waiting area immediately.
• Body Paragraph 1: Reason: Students are exposed to dangerous rain and heat while waiting.
• Body Paragraph 2: Reason: Many students stay late for school activities and deserve a safe place to wait.
• Body Paragraph 3 (Solution): A simple, covered structure with benches is affordable and easy to build.
• Conclusion: Restate position + Call to Action: The principal must approve this project before the rainy season begins.

3.3 The Cause-and-Effect Structure

This structure works best when you want to show exactly why a problem happens and what the consequences are:

Introduction → Body 1 (Cause) → Body 2 (Effect) → Body 3 (Fix) → Conclusion

Example Outline: Heavy School Bags

• Introduction: Problem: Students carry bags that are too heavy. Position: Schools must enforce a bag weight limit right away.
• Body Paragraph 1 (Cause): Students bring all textbooks every day even when they are not scheduled.
• Body Paragraph 2 (Effect): Carrying excessive weight daily causes back pain and exhaustion in young students.
• Body Paragraph 3 (Fix): A subject rotation schedule means students only bring what they need each day.
• Conclusion: Restate position + Call to Action: The principal must roll out the rotation schedule next quarter.

3.4 How to Make a Simple Outline

Your outline doesn't need to be long. Before you write, jot down these 5 core elements:

  • 1. My Position Statement
  • 2. Reason 1 (Good point)
  • 3. Reason 2 (Better point)
  • 4. Reason 3 (Strongest point or Solution)
  • 5. My Call to Action

3.5 One Important Tip — Save Your Best Reason for Last

Many beginners use their strongest argument in the first body paragraph, causing later paragraphs to feel weaker. Flip it. Think of your arguments like climbing a staircase. Save your most powerful, undeniable point for the final body paragraph, hitting the reader hardest right before the conclusion.

Step 1: Good Reason Solid opening argument to introduce the case
Step 2: Better Reason Stronger argument adding urgency and context
Step 3: Strongest Reason / Solution Your ultimate, most convincing point or clear fix

Let's Look at Two Outlines Side by Side

āŒ Weak Outline (Vague & Unorganized)

• Topic: School canteen needs to be better.
• Intro: Canteen has problems.
• Body 1: Food is not good.
• Body 2: Also canteen is far.
• Body 3: Students don't like it.
• Conclusion: School should fix things.

āœ… Strong Outline (Specific & Structured)

• Topic: Extend canteen service hours.
• Intro / Position: Canteen runs out of food by 11 AM. Canteen must extend hours to cover all lunch periods.
• Body 1 (Good): Students cannot focus in class when hungry.
• Body 2 (Better): Afternoon students are consistently disadvantaged.
• Body 3 (Strongest): School has staff and budget available; no reason to delay.
• Conclusion: Principal must adjust canteen schedule before next quarter.

šŸ’” Introduction Non-Negotiables: Every introduction must contain a news peg (recent timely event) and your stand (clear position statement). No exceptions!

āœļø Practice Time

Arrange scrambled editorial blocks, complete planning templates, and outline your own arguments.

1

Arrange the EditorialRead these scrambled paragraph summaries and match them to their correct structural parts.

šŸ“‹Topic: The school must repair the broken pathway near the main gate. Click Reveal Answer to check.
Paragraphs checked:
Paragraph A: "Every student who walks through the school gate deserves a safe pathway. The cracked concrete near the main entrance has already caused two injuries this month. The school principal must file a repair request with the Division Office this week... Students should not have to risk getting hurt just to get to class."
Paragraph B: "One reason the school must repair the pathway immediately is that the cracked concrete is a physical safety hazard. Two students have already tripped and been sent to the clinic this month. Broken, uneven ground is especially dangerous during rainy season..."
Paragraph C: "Every morning, students walking from the main gate to their classrooms must navigate a pathway with three large cracks in the concrete. Two students have already been injured this month. The school must repair the main pathway before another student gets hurt."
Paragraph D: "Repairing the pathway is not an expensive or complicated project. A local contractor quoted the school at less than five thousand pesos for a full concrete patch. Other schools in the district have completed similar repairs... The school has no valid reason to delay."
Paragraph E: "Another reason this repair is urgent is that students should not have to walk carefully just to get to their classroom. Learning begins the moment a student steps on school grounds. A dangerous pathway creates stress and anxiety..."
2

Fill in the OutlineSelect a topic and sketch a fast, structured editorial plan.

āœļøSelect a topic and fill out the form using short, concise planning notes.

šŸ” Self-Check Guide

What to CheckDone āœ…Try Again šŸ”„
My outline has all 5 parts (Intro, Body 1, Body 2, Body 3, Conclusion)☐☐
My position statement is highly specific and assertive☐☐
My three reasons are distinct arguments and do not repeat each other☐☐
My strongest, most practical reason is saved for the third body slot☐☐

šŸ“Š Simple Rubric

Active
Your outline is ready! Writing the final editorial essay will be much easier now because your road map is complete. šŸ—žļø

🧠 Spot the Fake Game

Read each outline. One thing is wrong, off-topic, or structurally broken. Spot the fake!

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Up Next — Chapter 4!

Chapter 4: Writing Strong Editorial Introductions

Now you can organize your thoughts using structured outlines. Next, discover how to write compelling opening sentences that hook your readers!

Chapter 4 →