Writing An Editorial
Writing An Editorial
Writing An Editorial
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Writing an Editorial
Another Tutorial by:
Alan Weintraut
Annandale High School
Annandale, VA 22312
Atraut@aol.com
Editorials have:
1. Explain or interpret: Editors often use these editorials to explain the way the
newspaper covered a sensitive or controversial subject. School newspapers may
explain new school rules or a particular student-body effort like a food drive.
2. Criticize: These editorials constructively criticize actions, decisions or situations
while providing solutions to the problem identified. Immediate purpose is to get
readers to see the problem, not the solution.
3. Persuade: Editorials of persuasion aim to immediately see the solution, not the
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Writing an Editorial https://www.geneseo.edu/~bennett/EdWrite.htm
problem. From the first paragraph, readers will be encouraged to take a specific,
positive action. Political endorsements are good examples of editorials of persuasion.
4. Praise: These editorials commend people and organizations for something done
well. They are not as common as the other three.
Writing an Editorial
1. Pick a significant topic that has a current news angle and would interest readers.
2. Collect information and facts; include objective reporting; do research
3. State your opinion briefly in the fashion of a thesis statement
4. Explain the issue objectively as a reporter would and tell why this situation is
important
5. Give opposing viewpoint first with its quotations and facts
6. Refute (reject) the other side and develop your case using facts, details, figures,
quotations. Pick apart the other side's logic.
7. Concede a point of the opposition — they must have some good points you can
acknowledge that would make you look rational.
8. Repeat key phrases to reinforce an idea into the reader's minds.
9. Give a realistic solution(s) to the problem that goes beyond common knowledge.
Encourage critical thinking and pro-active reaction.
10. Wrap it up in a concluding punch that restates your opening remark (thesis
statement).
11. Keep it to 500 words; make every work count; never use "I"
A Sample Structure
Include the five W's and the H. (Members of Congress, in effort to reduce the budget,
are looking to cut funding from public television. Hearings were held …)
• Pull in facts and quotations from the sources which are relevant.
• Additional research may be necessary.
As the writer you disagree with these viewpoints. Identify the people (specifically who
oppose you. (Republicans feel that these cuts are necessary; other cable stations can
pick them; only the rich watch public television.)
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Writing an Editorial https://www.geneseo.edu/~bennett/EdWrite.htm
You can begin your article with transition. (Republicans believe public televison is a
"sandbox for the rich." However, statistics show most people who watch public
television make less than $40,000 per year.)
• Pull in other facts and quotations from people who support your position.
• Concede a valid point of the opposition which will make you appear rational,
one who has considered all the options (fiscal times are tough, and we can cut
some of the funding for the arts; however, …).
In defense of your position, give reasons from strong to strongest order. (Taking money
away from public television is robbing children of their education …)
• Use a literary or cultural allusion that lends to your credibility and perceived
intelligence (We should render unto Caesar that which belongs to him …)
Give solutions to the problem or challenge the reader to be informed. (Congress should
look to where real wastes exist — perhaps in defense and entitlements — to find ways
to save money. Digging into public television's pocket hurts us all.)
http://library.thinkquest.org/50084/index.shtml
http://library.thinkquest.org/50084/editorials/index.html
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