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 Things we like: - Eye-appealing. The color scheme works because it not only mimics the color of cold weather, but a cool color like blue recedes into space and dark colors come to the top. It allows it to be a background.
- Conversational writing: It speaks directly to the reader.
- Clear message. "Easy to follow. Clearly numbered things. The background photograph works well because it's simple"
Focus Midland High School Midland, Michigan
Even better:
Make the subhead stand out more. "It was a little hard to read."
-- Sara Quinn, Visual-Journalism faculty, Poynter Institute Top stories: Find the digitally savvy...Is green one of your school colors?...Teachers, students and Facebook: BFF?...The search for a new superintendent...Check Your School's Latest Fire Inspection...Does Google Maps Get You Too Close?...Better than your average story...How much states spend on public schools...'Mature' video games and free speech...Schools boost fund-raisers with e-auctions...Can we believe the STD statistics?...Could get eaiser to get into first-choice college...Covering teen suicide...Teens and car crashes...Schools go 'green'...Should kids wear seatbelts on buses?...Maybe MySpace isn't so dangerous...Dedicated gamers living life virtually....Year-round athletes at risk for injuries...Teen suicide rates increase...
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| Top stories: Reveal the artist in you...Writing about race and ethnicity...Two top journalism sites for students...Watch and learn: award-winning multimedia... Three words focus your story...Digital or online tools worth learning...School papers using Facebook...Audio, from cell phone to web...Free course teaches typography basics...Is your school on EveryBlock?...Ever get in trouble? Colleges are asking...Involve your readers in debate coverage...Try Twitter for breaking news...Invest an hour in multimedia storytelling...Tips on alternate story forms...Video/multimedia that works: Homeless in church...Coaches who pray with the team... |
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Top stories: What video games teach about journalism and storytelling...A journalism motto in six words...Who knew copyright law could be fun?...Know your rights...The state of the news media -- and YOU...How to be an effective editor, times five...Leaders as storytellers ... J-students mentor second graders...Five reasons to teach journalism..Leaders as coaches...Leaders should be learners, too...Do you read a newspaper? Should you?...Mapping censorship and prior review...Dealing with difficult conversations...Go online with gusto...Web 101: The basics of domain names and hosts....Student editor leads her staff online (and you can, too)...
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Top stories: Lessons from online Pacemaker finalists... Internships will build your resume...'L.A. Youth' offers ideas, inspiration...Students break news of hidden cameras...The art of infographics... Controversy: reporting on the 'N' word...Students break news of quake online...Good writing on a tough, touchy story...Interview a World War II Veteran...On-the-spot news..."Beyond the Commons" at Peninsula High...48 hours to multimedia success...(And find out how your work can appear here!)
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PoynterHigh comes to you from The Poynter Institute, a school for journalists in St. Petersburg, Fla. If you live in Tampa Bay, apply to Poynter's High School Journalism Program, where 35 high school students attend Poynter workshops for two weeks in the summer and 10 evenings during the school year. High school students from anywhere in Florida may attend Poynter's one-day writing camp, the Florida High School Writers Workshop each February. Come to Poynter virtually. Take a free interactive online course from NewsU, a Poynter/Knight Foundation project. See courses that we recommend for high school students. Each takes an hour or two, and you can stop and restart as many times as you wish.
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