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News & Script Writing

English • 50 • 27 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
50
27 students
1 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

I want the plan to focus on news reading, script writing from conflict zones. It should be spread over 4 days

News & Script Writing

Overview

This 4-day unit focuses on engaging fourth-class students (9-10 years) in reading and writing news scripts inspired by conflict zones. The lessons align with the Irish Primary Language Curriculum’s oral language and writing strands, specifically developing comprehension, narrative skills, and creative composing within a real-world context. The unit’s approach nurtures empathy, critical thinking, and precise communication skills, tailored to age-appropriate understanding of complex themes.


Curriculum Links

  • Irish Primary Language Curriculum (PLC), English Strand:
    • Oral Language: Listening and responding to texts from diverse perspectives.
    • Writing: Composing texts with clarity, structure, and purpose.
  • NCCA Framework: Emphasis on critical literacy and empathy-building through real-world contexts.
  • Aistear Framework (Early Childhood to Primary Transition): Supporting language development through storytelling and roleplay.

Day 1: Understanding News & Conflict Zones

Objective

  • Students will understand what news is and explore the concept of conflict zones in a simplified, age-appropriate manner.
  • Develop listening and comprehension skills from news extracts.

Materials

  • Age-appropriate news clips or transcripts (fictionalised, child-friendly stories from conflict zones)
  • Whiteboard, markers
  • Notebooks

Activities (50 mins)

  1. Introduction (10 mins)

    • Discuss “What is news?” and why news is important. Elicit examples from students.
    • Brief introduction to the idea of a 'conflict zone' – explained in a sensitive, simple way (e.g., where people are having big problems but we want to tell their stories).
  2. Listening & Reading (15 mins)

    • Read out loud or listen to a short, child-appropriate news story from a conflict zone.
    • Pause periodically to ask prediction and reflection questions (e.g., What do you think is happening? How might people feel?).
  3. Group Discussion (15 mins)

    • Break students into small groups (4 or 5).
    • Have groups discuss what they heard and list main points (who, what, when, where, why).
    • Groups share their points with the class; teacher charts responses on the board.
  4. Wrap-up and Reflection (10 mins)

    • Recap key features of news (who, what, when, where, why/how).
    • Quick journal entry: “If you were a reporter, what story would you want to tell about people far away?”

Day 2: Structure of News Scripts

Objective

  • Students will identify essential parts of a news script and learn key vocabulary.
  • Begin drafting simple news scripts.

Materials

  • Example news scripts (with clear parts: headline, introduction, body, conclusion)
  • Headline cards with vocabulary (e.g., reporter, eyewitness, interview, conflict, peace)
  • Worksheets for script planning

Activities (50 mins)

  1. Review (5 mins)

    • Recap Day 1’s key points about news stories from conflict zones.
  2. Teaching News Script Structure (15 mins)

    • Present a simplified news script on the board or projector.
    • Discuss each section: headline, lead sentence, body, conclusion.
    • Identify use of clear, simple sentences and factual language.
  3. Vocabulary Game (10 mins)

    • Use headline vocabulary cards in a paired “match the word to its meaning” or “charades” game to internalise key terms.
  4. Planning Their Script (15 mins)

    • Students choose a character or event inspired by Day 1’s story or their own imagination about conflict zones.
    • Use a worksheet template to plan their news script parts with guiding questions.
  5. Sharing Plans (5 mins)

    • Volunteers briefly share their plans with the class for feedback.

Day 3: Writing & Editing News Scripts

Objective

  • Students will write a first draft of a news script using their planning worksheet.
  • Apply simple editing techniques for clarity and accuracy.

Materials

  • Students’ planning worksheets
  • Writing paper or tablets (if available)
  • Editing checklist

Activities (50 mins)

  1. Warm-up: Quick Review (5 mins)

    • Recap the parts of a news script.
  2. Writing Time (30 mins)

    • Students write their first drafts, using clear sentences and structured paragraphs.
    • Teacher circulates to provide guidance and support.
  3. Peer Editing (10 mins)

    • In pairs, students exchange scripts and use an editing checklist to give constructive feedback (focusing on capitalisation, punctuation, clarity, and whether the story answers who, what, when, where, why/how).
  4. Reflection (5 mins)

    • Journal prompt: “What was easy or hard about writing a news story?”

Day 4: Presenting & Reflecting on News Scripts

Objective

  • Students will orally present their news scripts to the class.
  • Reflect on the importance of responsible news reporting and empathy.

Materials

  • Students’ final scripts
  • Optional props or student-made microphones for presentation

Activities (50 mins)

  1. Rehearsal (10 mins)

    • Students practise reading their news scripts aloud with expression and clear pronunciation.
  2. Presentations (30 mins)

    • Each student or group presents their news script to the class (2-3 minutes each).
    • Encourage classmates to listen actively and prepare positive, constructive comments.
  3. Class Discussion & Reflection (10 mins)

    • Discuss the role of reporters in sharing stories from places where people face challenges.
    • Reflect on what students learned about kindness, understanding, and telling the truth.
    • Teacher summarises the unit with an emphasis on skills acquired: listening, planning, writing, editing, and speaking.

Assessment & Differentiation

  • Assessment:
    • Formative assessment through group discussions, peer editing, and presentations.
    • Teacher observation with feedback focusing on comprehension, vocabulary use, sentence structure, and clarity in writing/speaking.
  • Differentiation:
    • Provide sentence starters and vocabulary banks for students requiring support.
    • Challenge advanced learners to include quotes or variety in sentence length.
    • Use paired or group work to scaffold struggling students.

Innovative Elements to Impress

  • Use interactive storytelling apps or voice recorders (if available) to make the news script reading dynamic.
  • Introduce role-play interviews with one student as reporter and another as eyewitness to deepen empathy and oral practice.
  • Create a class “newsroom” corner, where students can post their news stories and updates for ongoing engagement.

This unit nurtures critical literacy skills linked directly to the Irish curricula while encouraging empathy and communication, tailored exactly to the fourth-class age group.

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