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Library > Social Sciences & Culture > Languages & Language Arts > Journalism
Journalism
(5)
2001
WhosGotNews.com is a site designed to help schools with their news broadcasts. Covering stages of production, art of presentation and the general content of newscasts.
About this site
1999
KPOV (Kids Point of View) News is a website where kids can come to relax and have fun while learning information that is interesting, current, upbeat and cool. The atmosphere is comfortable and kids can relate to the topics and use some of this info in their own lives. We hope that kids will come here and learn some important social skills at our "Friends Advice" page. Study skills can also be learned by visiting "Study Stuff". Kids will find recipes they can do themselves at home at our foods page. Kids from all over can see what students in our school think about topics at our "Polls" page. For fun kids might like to see our Astrology Page and lots of kids will love to take our Sports quiz.
About this site
1999
A visit to News By Kids is all you will need to start your own school news show. Written by an experienced news team, this site will give you an easy to follow plan, complete with photos, ranging from a news reporter to an edit suite. It also has helpful do's and don'ts to make your news the best it can be. From auditions to editing this website has the scoop. Our goal is to teach students how to create a successful school news program.
About this site
1998
Need help running your school newspaper or ideas for stories to write for the next issue? This site is a reference resource for Internet high school journalism. It presents sections on the five types of propaganda, common grammar mistakes, and tips on interviewing. A section on censorship defines what it is, the dilemmas of censorship, and a brief history. Learn about a journalist's responsibilities such as being objective, fair, accurate, clear, and complete.
About this site
1998
What does a journalist do? What happens behind the scenes before we get today's news? This site tracks three media formats: online, broadcast, and print news and follows the process each uses to prepare its reports. Interviews with news personalities--online writer Alexandra Pollya, TV reporter Diane Sawyer, and Los Angeles Times reporter Sean Macaulay--provide a first-hand look at what a career in each medium is like.
About this site