First assignment of the year is to do a little reporting and report-out on your partners summer adventures. Click read-more to see the sample.
Sample Summer News StorySummer breaks are often reserved for long vacations and relaxation and nobody knows this better then Hutchison High School teacher Ben Johnson. Johnson spent nearly one third of his summer somewhere other then his home town of Fairbanks Alaska. Though many of his adventures were for recreation all of them had the special tie-in of showing off his new baby girl Ayzling Heather Johnson. His travel began with a trip to the state capital Juneau Alaska where he visited with his Aunt and Uncle there. This excursion was complete with multiple boat rides in the inside passage including a slightly harrowing one and half our ride to some remote cabins in less then comfortable seas. Continued adventures would see him escort the HHS HOSA team to the national competition in Nashville. Primarily the babysitter on this adventure Johnson enjoyed showing off his cutie to the nearly 5000 high schools attending the competition. He also took time while in Nashville to visit the country music hall of fame and the Grand Ole Opry. Late summer travel included the a-typical Alaskan excursions including slaying red salmon on the Kenai and halibut in Homer all while in the company of his In-laws. The final adventures of the summer included a drive down the countries longest dirt highway, the Denali Highway as well as a trip to limit out himself and his parents on Silver salmon in Valdez. If summer is all about vacation and recreation it's easy to say Mr. Johnson had a great summer.
Things to Notice:
- See the lead-in sentence meant to hook as many readers as possible into the story
- Note how full name is used at start followed by last name
- Pay attention to the little attention grabbers (state capital, 5000 students, etc.) that are used to re-peak interest throughout the story
- See how the final sentence ties in to the lead-in and finalizes the story.
Things to Notice:
- See the lead-in sentence meant to hook as many readers as possible into the story
- Note how full name is used at start followed by last name
- Pay attention to the little attention grabbers (state capital, 5000 students, etc.) that are used to re-peak interest throughout the story
- See how the final sentence ties in to the lead-in and finalizes the story.