4. What are they and why do they matter?
What does 'institutional view' mean, and how
does that affect a newspaper's editorial page?
5. What are they and why do they matter?
What does 'institutional view' mean, and how
does that affect a newspaper's editorial page?
What are the newspaper's core values?
Editors come and go. Core values generally do not.
6. What's the difference between a personal
column and a newspaper editorial?
7. What's the difference between a personal
column and a newspaper editorial?
What other opinions matter?
Letters from readers
Guest columns from government officials,
community leaders, and others
Syndicated columnists
8. John Rung - Publisher
Dan McCaleb - Editor
Kevin Lyons - News Editor
Cyndi Wyss - Community Editor
Eric Olson - Sports Editor
(former community editor and news reporter)
9. What are the components?
Clarity of thought (editorial should be well reasoned, where idea
collaboration among staff/editorial board is helpful)
Pungency of phrase (the basis of persuasive writing has to be good
writing)
Statement of a need or expectation in concrete terms as a basis for
action (call to action important, whether it's to implore official action,
or to encourage the public to get involved)
Fostering appreciation of humanity's limitations, capability for folly,
and potential for glory (and never forget the importance of your own
humility; recognize legitimate arguments that are contrary to your
own; don't ignore the very real possibility that you might be wrong)
10.
11.
12.
13.
14. "Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus"
Francis P. Church
The Sun (New York), Sept. 21, 1897
"We were wrong, wrong, wrong"
Charles Overby
Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, September 1982
15. Chicago Sun-Times, Jan. 23, 2012
“Why we will no longer endorse in elections”
"We have come to doubt the value of candidate endorsements by
this newspaper or any newspaper, especially in a day when a
multitude of information sources allow even a casual voted to be
better informed than ever before.“
Chicago Tribune, Jan. 24, 2012
“Why we endorse: You have to make decisions. The Tribune tries
to help”
“Newspapers have a unique role as public citizen. They did in 1860
and they do today. It would be an abdication to say what we think
should be done on an array of issues every day – and then take a
vow of silence about who is most likely to advance those goals.”
16. Chicago Sun-Times, Jan. 23, 2012
“Why we will no longer endorse in elections”
"We have come to doubt the value of candidate endorsements by
this newspaper or any newspaper, especially in a day when a
multitude of information sources allow even a casual voted to be
better informed than ever before.“
Chicago Tribune, Jan. 24, 2012
“Why we endorse: You have to make decisions. The Tribune tries
to help”
“Newspapers have a unique role as public citizen. They did in 1860
and they do today. It would be an abdication to say what we think
should be done on an array of issues every day – and then take a
vow of silence about who is most likely to advance those goals.”
17.
18.
19. Select a topic.
Form an institutional view.
20. Remember the key components:
Clarity of thought (editorial should be well reasoned, where idea
collaboration among staff/editorial board is helpful)
Pungency of phrase (the basis of persuasive writing has to be good
writing)
Statement of a need or expectation in concrete terms as a basis for
action (call to action important, whether it's to implore official action,
or to encourage the public to get involved)
Fostering appreciation of humanity's limitations, capability for folly,
and potential for glory (and never forget the importance of your own
humility; recognize legitimate arguments that are contrary to your
own; don't ignore the very real possibility that you might be wrong)
21. Dan McCaleb
Northwest Herald
dmccaleb@shawmedia.com
www.nwherald.com