Test your basic knowledge |

News And Mag Editing Basics

Instructions:
  • Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
  • If you are not ready to take this test, you can study here.
  • Match each statement with the correct term.
  • Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.

This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Basic situations in Invasion of privacy






2. Grammar






3. What's the key to plural possessives?






4. Editors such purge copy of these trite - overused expressions. Ex: sweet as sugar






5. A linked collection of onlin bulletin boards organized into specific topics of interest or 'news groups'.






6. Cut the copy (quick and to the point) - Be clear - Involve the reader ('How I' approach - 'How you' approach - 'How Jane Doe' approach) - Think useful - Think new or news - Think money






7. Execution (technique - creativity - etc.)






8. Audiences respond to these words because they convey a precise relationship to their concepts- words like office rather than facility.






9. Do not change anything inside quote marks (Exception: punctuation and spelling) - Never put quote marks around indirect quotes






10. Provide a sizeable portion of a publication's revenue.






11. Fair use






12. What are the types of verbals?






13. Letters to/from editor - Letters from readers - Calendars - Q & A - Cartoons - quotes - Shopping guides






14. Control Ethnocentrism (your own country and culture is better than others) - Altruistic Democracy: politicians should serve the public good not own interests - Responsible Capitalism: open competition among business will create better world - Small-t






15. 'Totally demolished' is an example of this. This diminishes the conciseness and clarity of writing.






16. Libel






17. Coordinating conjunctions






18. Agenda Setting (sets the agenda) - Gatekeeping - Watchdog - Verification - Marketplace of Ideas - Mobilizers -Public journalism - Developmental journalism






19. How broadcasters write stories. Leads are shorter in length and they are in the present tense.






20. A statement of purpose that identifies the specific editorial focus of the magazine - who the intended readers are and a definition of its personality






21. Titles should promise...






22. Appear outside body copy with the title - deck or subhead






23. Alliteration and rhyme - Allusions to books - movies and TV - Songs and music - Phrases and puns - Names become fun to play with






24. Avoid using it unless it's relevant.






25. When should references to someone's heritage - gender - sexuality or disability be included?

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26. Why should you use quotes?






27. When paraphrasing and quotes repeat each other - redundant.






28. Concept - Structure - Reporting - Style (creativity) - Presentation - Was it worth saying? Is there relevance/timeliness?






29. Fair comment and criticism






30. In essence - anything from the text but the story (Title - deck - head - subhead - pull quotes - bylines - blurbs - captions - etc.) - Used to draw readers into a story - Stats reinforce display copy and visuals






31. Public editor






32. Executive producer






33. Visual interest - cosumerism - trends - community - inspiration - twists of fate - great writing.






34. Never change anything in direct quotes from a printed source - Always attribute direct quotes from a printed source - Place [sic] immediately following an error from a printed source (Not style - purely factual errors; sic means thus - that's how you






35. What's an efficient approach to copy editing?






36. Absolute privilege






37. Editors must be able to idenify this in stories that can result in imnbalance or offensive langugage.






38. Why are accuracy problems magnified at the local level?






39. Damages






40. Emphasize the latest angle and play down the exact time of the original event.






41. Professional language that reporters are prone to use because their sources use it.






42. A personal story rather than general.






43. Tells the reader the source of the quote or information.






44. More historical context and common ground for opposing views.






45. Collective noun






46. Credibility by telling exactly what witnesses see - experts say - etc. - Enliven and dramatize - Reveal personality






47. Reputation is...

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48. What's the best defense against libel?






49. Story budget

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50. When is 'which' used?