You have your facts. Now β where do they all go? There's a system. And once you learn it, you'll use it every single time.
Last chapter, you learned the 5Ws and 1H β the six questions every news story must answer.
Now you've got your facts. But here's the next problem.
You have six pieces of information. Maybe more. Where do they all go?
Do you just write them in any order and hope it works out? Nope.
There's a system. And once you learn it, you'll use it every single time you write a news story.
Back in the 1800s, journalists sent news over the telegraph β a machine that transmitted messages over long distances. Telegraph was expensive. Every word cost money. And sometimes the connection would cut out without warning. So journalists had to send the most critical information first. If the transmission got cut off? At least the important stuff was already through. That habit became a rule.
And it still makes perfect sense today. Most people don't finish reading an article. They stop when they feel they know enough. So if your best information is at the top, your reader gets it β even if they never reach the end.
Imagine a regular triangle flipped upside down. The wide part β the biggest section β is now at the top. That's your most important information. The narrow point is at the bottom. That's your least important information.
Same event. Same facts. But Version B puts the reader first. They learn the most important thing immediately β and everything after just adds to it.
If your article got cut after the very first sentence β your reader should still understand what happened. That's the whole point.
Put the inverted pyramid into action β rank sentences and build your own story.
"Barangay San Isidro held a free dental check-up for all elementary students at the covered court last Thursday morning. More than 300 students from San Isidro Elementary were checked by four dentists from the barangay health center. Barangay Captain Reyes said the program aimed to address the rise in tooth decay cases among school-age children. Parents were also invited to attend and learn about proper dental hygiene. The barangay has held similar programs twice before, in 2022 and 2023."
| Level | What Goes Here | My Sentence |
|---|---|---|
| Lead | The biggest, most important fact | |
| Body β S2 | Important supporting detail | |
| Body β S3 | Another detail or quote | |
| Body β S4 | Background or context | |
| Tail β S5 | Least important extra detail |
| What to Check | Done β | Try Again π |
|---|---|---|
| My first sentence gives the most important fact | β | β |
| Each sentence is less critical than the one before it | β | β |
| My least important detail is at the very end | β | β |
| If someone only read sentence one, they'd know what happened | β | β |
Answers will differ for each student. Use the rubric or ask your teacher for help.
Each story has one problem β a big fact is in the wrong place. Find it!
You now know the shape of a news story. In Chapter 5, you'll zoom in on the most important sentence of the entire article β the lead. Get it right and they'll read everything else.