Module One
Module One
A determinant is a factor that sets the character of something, in this case, news. The
determinants of news are as follow.
Timeliness
Today’s news may be stale tomorrow. Therefore, to attain that reader viewer or listener interest
or appeal, facts must be fresh. However, some issues of great impact are timeliness. Therefore,
the best time to tell an important story is as soon as it happens or as soon as possible.
Proximity/Geographic Location
Distance between the news item’s place of origin and its place of publication determines its
degree of reader appeal, and the limits of reader – interest. Usually, the nearer an individual is to
the location of a news event, the more relevant it becomes for him/her. This is referred to as
geographic proximity.
All men may be created equal, but some are more equal and more newsworthy than others. In
fact, “names make news” goes a cliché. However, names do not always make news. Still,
happenings that involve well-known people or institutions are likely to be interesting even if not
very important.
Consequence/Impact/Significance/Magnitude
How many people an event or idea affects and how seriously it affects them determine its
importance as news, as well as the extent to which the information may be useful. Again, an item
or event may give rise to thought not because of itself but because of its probable consequences –
its significance.
Human Interest
Interest in human beings and events because they concern men and women in situations that
might confront anyone else, is called human interest. In a general way, human-interest stories
might be defined as those stories that arouse an emotion in the reader/ listener/ viewer and evoke
emotional response.
Novelty
This sounds like human interest but shows some differences. The unusual makes news. The
bizarre makes news too. Remember the-man- bite-dog principle. The principle applies here. The
first flight to the moon was big news, so was Sandra Day O’ Connor’s appointment as the first
woman Justice of the United States Supreme Court. The day a female becomes the Vice
President of the US it will be the biggest news around the globe. “Firsts,” “Lasts,” and “Only”
have always been newsworthy. So also are stories of freak occurrences and scientific or
pseudoscientific phenomena.
Conflict
Nearly every story on each of our front pages is a report of conflict. Conflict is a central feature
of most news. Sometimes it is physical, as in wars or sports. Sometimes it is more subtle and
sophisticated like political conflict.
Necessity
The seven earlier discussed news values involve people, events and situations that call out for
coverage. The value of necessity is, however, the journalist’s making (Mencher, 2010).
According to the Mencher (2010), the journalist has discovered something he or she feels it is
necessary to disclose. The essential element here is that the journalist considers a situation to
be something everyone should know about and usually it is a situation that needs to be
exposed and remedied.
In this section, we shall be examining the components or the contents of news. A component is a
constituent part of something. They tend to have more news values or higher news values than
stories that lack them. The more of news components you find in a story, the higher the news
worthiness of such a story. Many items could easily fall into the components of news. However,
we shall discuss eight that always sell a story anytime it is a content of such story. The eight
components of news are:
3. News Virtues
Reporters should strive to make the news they publish or broadcast win the credibility and
confidence of their readers and listeners by adhering firmly to the triple news virtues. These are:
Truth
All news stories must represent factual events and personalities. The reporter should also
ensure that the facts of the News are truthful to the best of his/her knowledge before publishing
or broadcasting such story.
Objectivity
Objectivity presupposes that the reporter presents the reader with all sides of an issue,
presents all the facts and allows the reader to decide what these facts mean. For a story to
be objective, it must be devoid of a reporter’s biases and prejudice. It must not also be slanted
or editorialized.
Accuracy
Accuracy is a pillar on which every story rests. A news story can be regarded as accurate if all
names, ages, addresses and direct quotations in the story are accurate or correct. The only way to
meet this requirement is for the reporter to check, double- check or even triple-check his facts
before going to the press.
Chapter 2
Identify who a reporter is and what differentiates him/her from other media practitioner
Identify qualities a good reporters
Differentiate between a good reporter and a bad one.
Some of the major qualities that make a good reporter are discussed below.
S/he must have a mastery of the written or spoken language of the medium of expression:
This will enable him/her to interact easily with news sources, eyewitnesses or even the victims of
events.
S/he must have a nose for news: This means the reporter or journalist must be curious about
getting news from newsy or stale situations. A good reporter must have a natural instinct for
news and should be able to identify news from seemingly events that may not be considered
newsworthy by everyone else.
S/he must be current and keep abreast of events and happenings: In the media industry,
yesterday’s news is stale and no more needed. To remain relevant in the industry, therefore, the
reporter must keep abreast of happenings in and around him/her.
A good reporter must be fair, accurate and objective in his news writing and reporting job.
Fairness, accuracy and objectivity are news virtues, which the profession thrives on. Any attempt
to compromise any of these values makes a mess of the reputation and credibility of the industry.
These qualities of a reporter must be jealously guarded.
A good reporter must be creative: Creativity makes the reporter see another unique story from
an already published report. Without creativity, the reporter will remain dry, uninspiring and
boring to his readers and even his sources.
S/he must also have the ability to dress well: A common idiom says how you dress is how you
are addressed and I add that it also betrays your address. A good reporter must know how to
dress for the occasion otherwise he/she will be lost in the crowd or misrepresented. Dressing well
is not necessarily dressing expensively. It only means having the right kind of dress for each
occasion or situation.
A good reporter must have perseverance: Perseverance is having the staying power and
refusing to give up even when the situation calls for giving up. A good reporter must have the
ability to stay longer and under stress or pressure.
A good reporter must be a “good mixer”: There is no room for the reserved kind of reporter
who cannot easily get into a discussion with a potential news source. A good reporter should be
able to blend easily with all kinds of persons especially when such persons are primary to getting
the news he/she is pursuing at that moment. The good reporter should be able to make contacts,
grow and maintain them.
S/he must have a high level of comportment: The good reporter must have self-control and
high level of comportment no matter the situation or circumstances. He/she is not expected to be
carried away easily by any surrounded situation.
A good reporter must have the ability to embark on creative risk and courage especially in
reporting coups, wars, conflicts, crime, disaster etc.
S/he must have the ability to ferret out news through the process of monitoring people and
events.
S/he must also possess good observatory skills and have an eye for details: Poorly trained
reporters look without seeing. The good reporter is able to see leads and news worthy situations
by merely observing people and situations. Whenever the good reporter looks, he/she sees.
He/she is also able to taken in a lot of details by mere observation.
S/he must be a good listener and must have an unusual patience: The poorly trained
reporters are only interested in hearing their voices in an interview situation. However, a good
reporter is only interested in hearing the news source talk. Therefore, listening becomes a vital
quality a reporter must possess in order to succeed.
S/he should also possess enough idealism to inspire indignant prose but not too much as to
obstruct detached professionalism (Ragged Right cited in Agbese, 2008).
A good and modern reporter must be multi-skilled: S/he should be equipped with an array of
skills to meet the demands of diverse media users (Mencher, 2010).
A good and modern reporter must also have the unique quality called enterprise: He/she
should be able to work through tougher assignments or situation by instantaneously assessing the
situation and taking decisions and steps that will give him/her what the media organization
wants.
A good reporter must also have the strength of character to lead a disrupted personal life without
going absolutely haywire (Ragged Right cited in Agbese, 2008).
Every reporter really desires to be the first to get the news out. The so- called old fashioned scoops are
still fashionable even in today’s media industry. Being the first gives them a sense of fulfillment and
originality.
Successful reporters are usually motivated by the desire that their outputs changed the course history.
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of the famed Watergate Scandal are examples of reporters in this
class.
Wining prizes
This is a little controversial because most journalists argue that their stories were not motivated by prize
and awards. But a careful look at the work of journalists suggests this is one of the motivating factors.
Impressing sources
According to Byron Calame cited in Mencher (2010), most of the journalists remain highly motivated to
impress their sources with the accuracy, fairness and depth of their work.
Most reporters who aim to the top are usually moved to tell their stories in a way that their listeners or
audiences are compelled to see to the end of the story.
Any reporter who spends five months in a media organization, say newspaper, and does not get on the
front page of the paper, may be regarded as not doing well. Front page stories are big stories in the
judgment of editors. So, reporters strive to have a sense of fulfillment that their story was considered big
and good to make a front page. The feeling is always rewarding and unexplainable.
Do not pass a verdict or make a judgment: It is not your duty as a reporter or writer to pass a
verdict or make judgment. Just gather the facts of the story, present them to your audience and
let them decide on whose side they will want to go.
Do not editorialize: Leave editorializing to the editorial writers. News reports must be as
straightforward and objective as possible.
Avoid the use of unfamiliar jargon: Do not assume that your audience understands the
meanings of the unfamiliar jargons you are using. Always use familiar words.
Keep yourself and other reporters out of the story: Keep yourself and other
colleagues out of the story unless you and they are an essential part of the news.
Avoid the use of “told me,” “told this writer” or “told our reporter: The phrase “in
an interview will serve your purpose.
There must be perfect accuracy in writing and reporting: When in doubt, leave it
out.
There must be no willful distortion of facts in either news or headlines: Never
tamper with the facts of a story no matter the benefits that may accrue to you as a result.
This is an unforgivable offence in journalism. Any reporter who tampers or fabricates
the so-called facts of a story is “finished” in the industry. You become leprous,
untouchable and unemployable.
Guard against publication of libelous statement: The good reporter is the one who
lives to write another report and see the fame of the previous reports come to him.
Avoid writing your way into jail. Libelous statements should be avoided because of its
capacity to keep you in jail and close down your media organization because of
insolvency resulting from the inability to pay court fines.
Always use simple words: News writing and reporting are not the platforms to impress
anybody with long sounding and big words. Always use the nearest simple word. A
good news report is the one the average reader reads and understands.
All news copies must be typewritten and double-spaced: The era of hand-written
copies is gone. Therefore, a reporter must know how to type his story using the
computer. It must also be typed in double space so that sub-editors and editors will be
able to edit the copy.
The first page must carry the reporter’s surname, a slug line and date in the top
left hand corner: Slug lines must be short- preferably one word.
Start your story halfway down the first page: You must give enough space for your
superior editorial staff to work on your copy.
Leave at least one-inch margin at left, right, top and bottom of each page: Do not
overcrowd the pages. Leave appropriate margins as required.
Each page must be numbered or lettered: The correct letter or numeral is in the form
of “B copy next” or “page 2 next.” This type of numbering must appear at the bottom
right hand corner of each page except the last. The end of a story must be marked by a
centered “30” or “***” or “#.”
Always make your lead interesting: Guard against misleading leads. Leads sell a
story. Therefore, to get and keep the attention of your audience, the lead must be
interesting.