Chapter 10: Writing a Full News Article β€” CampusJourn
Chapter 10 β€” Final Chapter

Writing a Full News Article

Nine chapters. Nine skills. Now you put them all together β€” headline, lead, body, and tail β€” in one complete news story.

🎯 Chapter Objective: By the end of this chapter, you will be able to write a complete news article β€” headline, lead, body, and tail β€” using everything you have learned across all nine chapters.
A Filipino Grade 6 student at a desk writing a complete news article, surrounded by notes and a planning guide

Last Chapter, You Learned to Edit. Now Use Everything.

Last chapter, you learned how to review and correct your article before it reaches any reader.

That was the final skill.

Now here's the thing. You've been building toward this chapter since Chapter 1.

Every chapter gave you one piece. Now all the pieces are on the table.

Today you put them all into one article.

Everything You've Learned

ChapterWhat You Learned
Chapter 1What makes something news β€” timely + news element
Chapter 2Accuracy, Brevity, Clarity, and Ethics (ABCs and E)
Chapter 3The 5Ws and 1H β€” Who, What, When, Where, Why, How
Chapter 4The inverted pyramid β€” most important first
Chapter 5How to write an effective lead
Chapter 6How to build the body with quotes, facts, and consequences
Chapter 7How to write a headline using the SVO pattern
Chapter 8The news writing style β€” seven rules every sentence must follow
Chapter 9How to edit before publishing β€” structure, style, and ethics
πŸ”Ί
A Full Article Has Four Parts β€” Always in This Order Headline β†’ Lead β†’ Body β†’ Tail. You know all of this. You've practiced each part separately. Now they work together.

A Complete News Article β€” Labeled

Read this complete article. Notice how every part connects to the next β€” and how the inverted pyramid keeps the most important fact right at the top.

Headline
Grade 5 Team Wins Regional Quiz Bowl Championship
Lead
Grade 5 students from Maliwanag Elementary won the Regional Quiz Bowl Championship last Saturday at Quezon City Science High School, defeating 23 other schools from across the region.
Body 1
The team answered questions in Science, Mathematics, and English over four elimination rounds. Team captain Miles Santos scored the highest individual points in the final round. School principal Mrs. Edel Cruz said, "This is the proudest moment for our school in years. These students worked so hard for this."
Body 2
The championship qualifies the team to represent the region in the national competition in Manila next month. The school plans to hold a send-off ceremony for the team on Friday.
Tail
The Regional Quiz Bowl has been held annually since 2017. This is the first time Maliwanag Elementary has reached the championship round.
ParagraphLabelWhy
HeadlineHeadlineSVO: "Grade 5 Team" + "Wins" + "Regional Quiz Bowl Championship." Present tense. No bias.
Paragraph 1LeadWho + What + When + Where immediately. Most important fact first.
Paragraph 2BodyHow the event was done + quote from named, titled principal.
Paragraph 3BodyConsequences (national competition) + what happens next (send-off ceremony).
Paragraph 4TailBackground β€” history of the competition. Least urgent. Goes last.

If an editor had to cut this to one paragraph β€” paragraph 1 still tells the whole story. That's the inverted pyramid doing its job.

The Planning Guide

Before you write a single sentence β€” fill this in. A reporter who skips the planning guide spends twice as long writing. A reporter who fills it in first writes faster and misses fewer facts.

You'll use this guide in the Practice section. For now, study the template so you're ready.

QuestionWhat to Fill In
Topic / EventWhat happened?
WhoName the people or group involved
WhatThe main event or action
WhenDay, date, or time
WherePlace or location
WhyReason or purpose
HowMethod or process
Quote 1Name + title + exact words
Key FactA specific statistic, amount, or count
BackgroundOne historical or context detail
What's NextNext step, consequence, or plan

✏️ Practice Time

Label the parts of a real article β€” then write your own complete news story.

1

Label the Parts Read the article and choose the correct label for each paragraph.

πŸ“‹ The title is already labeled. Choose Lead, Body, or Tail for each paragraph, then click Check My Labels.
βœ… Headline β€” Already done!
Students Collect 500 Books for School Library Drive
"Grade 4, 5, and 6 students from Rizal Central School collected 500 books for the school library through a two-week donation drive that ended last Friday."
"The drive was organized to replace books damaged by flooding last month. Students brought used books from home and placed them in collection boxes outside each classroom. According to librarian Mrs. Alberta Reyes, the 500 books collected more than doubled the library's current shelves."
"Student Council president James Cruz said, 'We didn't want any student to come to the library and find empty shelves.' The school plans to open the refilled library to all students starting Monday."
"The school library was established in 2012. It serves over 700 students across all grade levels."
2

Writing Practice β€” Write Your Own Full Article Choose an event, fill in the planner, then write your complete article using the scaffold.

πŸ“ Three steps: choose your event, fill in the planning guide, then write each part using the scaffold. Run the Pre-Publish Ethics Check when done.

Step 1 β€” Choose Your Event

Step 2 β€” Fill in Your Planning Guide

QuestionYour Answer
Topic / Event
Who
What
When
Where
Why
How
Quote
Key Fact
Background
What's Next

Step 3 β€” Write Each Part

Headlineβ€” SVO, present tense, no bias
Leadβ€” Who + What + When + Where
Body Paragraph 1β€” Why + How + Quote + Key Fact
Body Paragraph 2β€” Quote + What Happens Next
Tailβ€” Background information

Step 4 β€” Pre-Publish Ethics Check

Answer honestly before you submit

Ready to publish when Q1, Q2, Q3 = YES and Q4 = NO.

1Is this my own work, written in my own words?
2Did I say where every important fact came from?
3Is my article fair to every person mentioned in it?
4Does my article contain anything harmful, copied, or unproven?

πŸ” Self-Check Guide

What to CheckDone βœ…Try Again πŸ”„
My headline follows the SVO pattern☐☐
My lead answers Who, What, When, and Where☐☐
My body has at least one quote with name and title☐☐
My body has at least one specific fact or number☐☐
My body says what happens next☐☐
My tail has background information☐☐
I used active voice throughout☐☐
I used gender-fair language throughout☐☐
All facts are attributed to a source☐☐
My Pre-Publish Ethics Check is complete☐☐

πŸ“Š Final Rubric β€” Aligned With DepEd Standards

CategoryWhat Is Being CheckedPoints
HeadlineClear, SVO, unbiased, present tense, no double meanings/10
LeadMost important detail first, answers key 5Ws/15
BodySupporting details, quote with attribution, fact, consequence/25
TailBackground information present/10
Form and StyleActive voice, simple language, short sentences, no opinions/20
EthicsAttribution, balance, originality, gender-fair, no libel/20
Total/100

Answers will differ for each student. Use the rubric to check your work or ask your teacher for help.

🧠 The Final Challenge

Ten questions β€” one from each chapter. Everything you've learned, all in one game.

0/10
Score
Question 1 of 10
QUESTION 1 OF 10
Loading…
πŸ—žοΈ
0
out of 10

Final Score Guide

10 / 10
You finished this course like a real journalist. πŸ—žοΈ
8–9 / 10
Outstanding. Look back at the questions you missed.
6–7 / 10
Strong effort. Review the chapters those questions came from.
4–5 / 10
Good start. Go back to Chapters 1–5 and work forward again.
1–3 / 10
No worries at all. The whole course is still there for you. Start from Chapter 1.