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Writing newspaper reports

Newspaper report writing provides fantastic opportunities to develop key non-fiction writing skills. So train up your key stage 2 reporters in journalistic writing with these English teaching resources and reading comprehension activities based on analysing and writing newspaper articles. 

These worksheets and PowerPoints will help children to identify the key features of a newspaper report, including grammar features such as the past tense, reported speech, direct speech and speech marks. They also include newspaper report examples to help children understand how to grab a reader’s attention with a powerful headline and an interesting first sentence and to identify bias and compare broadsheet and tabloid newspaper writing styles.

Our newspaper templates will help children with newspaper report planning before writing their own newspaper headlines and news reports. 

You may also be interested in our writing resource packs:  Writing non-fiction (lower KS2)  and  Writing non-fiction (upper KS2)  which include lesson plans, newspaper report examples and WAGOLL texts. 

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  • How To Write A Newspaper Report Ks2 English Resources

KS2 newspaper report – Best activities & resources

Young kid reading large newspaper

Extra! Extra! Boost students' non-fiction writing skills with these newspaper report templates, guidelines, formats, tips, worksheets and more…

Teachwire

Whether you’re a seasoned pro or a fresh face in the teaching world, these creative and educational KS2 newspaper report ideas and resources will not only inspire your students but also make learning about news reporting an exciting adventure.

So, let’s dive in and transform your classroom into a bustling newsroom…

Newspaper writing activity ideas for KS2

Ks2 newspaper report resources.

Investigate word choice and non-fiction writing with your very own school newspaper project, explains teacher Karen Hart…

In my school, this KS2 newspaper report activity formed part of a ‘looking at information texts’ literacy project. The activity delivered great results. Children contributed imaginative language to stories that were both inventive and genuinely funny.

Preparing for the activity

Although many newspaper reports are not suitable for general reading at KS2, most local papers or specialist children’s newspapers contain plenty of suitable content.

Prior to this activity, look at some newspapers in detail and talk about their constituent parts, such as:

  • advice columns
  • sports section
  • business news

Information texts

Start with a whole-class activity. Look at a few news stories covering a range of subjects. Our session included a story about the London Marathon; one about healthy eating and a report of a T-Rex skeleton that was going to auction.

Lead a discussion. Encourage children to talk about why these subjects are interesting to people. How does the language used make the written stories seem both interesting and exciting?  

Exciting writing

Next, look at these stories in more detail. Write lists of the words children think were chosen specifically to add interest.

For example, our T-Rex story included words such as  menacing pose , and  bloodthirsty stance . Get the pupils to work in groups to write their own short news story using the title, ‘Giant, hairy creature spotted in [your location]’. Aim to make it as exciting as possible.

Each group might have a different take on the topic. You can also do this as a whole-class activity.  

Write a KS2 newspaper report

Now, working in groups of two to three, give the children an envelope containing two short news story cuttings, plus two unrelated newspaper picture cuttings.

We used stories about ‘King Charles visits Dunfermline’ and ‘Twins grow record-breaking pumpkin’, plus pictures of a squirrel and a wedding cake. 

Support the pupils to write their own short news stories combining at least two of their given cuttings.

KS2 newspaper report example

Remind them to consider elements they’ve already covered, such as language choice, and to think about how they can combine seemingly unrelated things (such as a squirrel and King Charles’ Dunfermline visit) in a funny or unexpected way.  

Structuring writing

To help structure their stories, give children a simple framework to work with, and display it on the board.

  • headline  (title)
  • byline  (names of people writing the article)
  • location  (explains where the story takes place at the beginning of the story)
  • story  (the main part – who, what, when, why, and how
  • supporting information  (any extra facts that are relevant)

Make sure to talk about all these terms and what they mean. 

Newsreader activity

Pupils can create their own images to accompany their news stories, and then finish off the workshop with a fun newsreader activity.

Staying in their groups, ask children to pretend to be newsreaders, taking turns to read their stories to the rest of the class. Be mindful that not everyone likes to read in front of others.

For the finale, work to combine all the news stories into a class newspaper.  

Karen Hart is an independent drama teacher, author and freelance writer.

Newspaper front page template

KS2 newspaper report template

When it comes to writing a KS2 newspaper report, a great place to start is to have a free, printable template to work from. So we’ve created one for you to download and print.

BFG newspaper report

KS2 newspaper report BFG lesson plan

Roald Dahl’s beloved BFG story provides the perfect opportunity to tackle newspaper report writing. This engaging activity involves acting as journalists to investigate and write a newspaper report about Sophie’s disappearance based on evidence found at the scene.

Write a magical Harry Potter report

Newspaper reports for KS2

Enliven the process of teaching newspaper reports for KS2 by imagining you are journalists reporting on a magical story within the world of Harry Potter with this free lesson plan .

Topical Tuesdays with First News

newspaper report year 2

If you want to expose children to the language and layouts of newspaper but you’re worried about them coming across unsuitable material, try a specialist children’s newspaper such as First News.

Literary resources website Plazoom has a large collection of news story clippings from the paper that you can download for free , alongside Topical Tuesdays activity sheets that help you explore the chosen news report as a class.

‘Hack’ and edit websites

KS2 newspaper report lesson plan

This free lesson plan uses a free tool called  Hackasaurus , which allows you to change the content of other people’s websites.

Using Hackasaurus, you can ‘hack’ any website and change it to display the content that you provide (this works particularly well with news providers). It is extremely easy to do and will look more authentic than creating a whole website from scratch.

But don’t worry, although it will look genuine, the website won’t really be hacked – it’s just a very real-looking copy. The internet police won’t be knocking on your door.

Newspaper report presentation with video

KS2 newspaper report video screenshot

In this lesson from Oak Teacher Hub’s Spiderman unit , pupils will revise all the features of a newspaper report and write their own. The resource contains a presentation and a video.

Layout devices teaching sequence

KS2 newspaper report layout lesson plan

This KS2 grammar teaching sequence for layout devices from Plazoom helps children familiarise themselves with different types of newspaper report layouts, before trying the techniques out themselves to present three key facts about a topic they know well.

Features of a newspaper report

newspaper report year 2

This BBC Bitesize guide goes over all the basics about newspaper articles in a short, snappy video, plus there’s a quick interactive activity where children label a front page with the correct terms such as ‘headline’, ‘caption’ and ‘title’.

News report writing tips

newspaper report year 2

This post from First News features ten top tips for writing a newspaper report to help pupils perfect their articles.

Fact or opinion worksheet

newspaper report year 2

This simple worksheet is divided into three sections. The first presents a number of statements for pupils to decide whether they’re fact or opinion.

The second asks them to write their own facts and opinions on various things. The third features three passages where they need to pick out the facts and opinions.

Plus, there’s an extension activity that asks them to write their own newspaper article and then underline the facts and opinions in different colours.

Analyse the presentation of newspaper articles

newspaper report year 2

This lesson plan was designed for a mixed-ability Year 7 class, so should be easily adaptable for upper-KS2. It involves looking closely at a newspaper article and identifying language and presentational features that support meaning in non-fiction text.

Opening lines

newspaper report year 2

This Word document features a number of headlines and opening sentences to newspaper articles and tasks students to match them together.

It then gives them a number of important questions to answer and tasks to do, from picking out keywords to considering what they think each article will be about or what the main photo might be.

Click here to download.

Use drama to explore the stories behind newspaper headlines

newspaper report year 2

This free unit of work lets KS2 pupils use drama to explore the stories  behind  newspaper headlines. It focuses on creating story, looking at pivotal moments, exploring character and feelings, reporting, representing and recording news items.

The scheme is presented as one long unit but you can easily divide it into shorter lessons.

Newspaper reports example articles

newspaper report year 2

For a wealth of free downloadable reports and recounts, head over to  Literacy Wagoll  where you’ll find reports of dragons on the loose and Jack climbing the beanstalk, as well as reports on topics such as WW2 and the Rugby World Cup final.

More activities

newspaper report year 2

Over at Teachit Primary there’s a great selection of newspaper-related activities for KS2.

There’s this one that explains the concept of the  inverted news pyramid , where all essential information is stacked at the front of the article.

There’s this one on  avoiding ambiguity , and one on  refraining from repetition , plus this one on  the art of alliteration in headlines .

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Strong Taiwan Quake Kills 9, Injures Hundreds

The earthquake was the most powerful to hit the island in 25 years. Dozens of people remained trapped, and many buildings were damaged, with the worst centered in the city of Hualien.

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  • Hualien, Taiwan A landslide after the quake. Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times
  • New Taipei City, Taiwan Books flew off shelves as a home shook. @Abalamindo via Storyful
  • Taipei, Taiwan Passengers waiting at a train station as some services were suspended. Chiang Ying-Ying/Associated Press
  • Hualien, Taiwan People are rescued from a building that had partially collapsed. TVBS via Associated Press
  • Hualien, Taiwan Firefighters rescuing trapped residents from a building. CTI News via Reuters
  • Taipei, Taiwan Students evacuated to a school courtyard after the earthquake. Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times
  • Guishan Island, Taiwan Rocks tumbling down one side of an island popular for hiking. Lavine Lin via Reuters
  • Hualien, Taiwan A building leaned to one side after the quake. Randy Yang via Associated Press
  • Ishigaki, Okinawa, Japan Watching news on a rooftop of a hotel after a tsunami warning. Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
  • Hualien, Taiwan Motorbikes damaged in the quake. TVBS via Associated Press
  • New Taipei City, Taiwan Damage in an apartment Fabian Hamacher/Reuters
  • New Taipei City, Taiwan Water cascading down a building during the quake. Wang via Reuters

Meaghan Tobin

Meaghan Tobin and Victoria Kim

Here’s what you need to know about the earthquake.

Taiwan was rocked Wednesday morning by the island’s strongest earthquake in a quarter century, a magnitude 7.4 tremor that killed at least nine people, injured more than 800 others and trapped dozens of people.

The heaviest damage was in Hualien County on the island’s east coast, a sleepy, scenic area prone to earthquakes. Footage from the aftermath showed a 10-story building there partially collapsed and leaning heavily to one side, from which residents emerged through windows and climbed down ladders, assisted by rescuers. Three hikers were killed after being hit by falling rocks on a hiking trail in Taroko National Park, according to the county government.

By late afternoon, officials said rescue efforts were underway to try to rescue 127 people who were trapped, many of them on hiking trails in Hualien.

One building in Changhua County, on the island’s west coast, collapsed entirely. The quake was felt throughout Taiwan and set off at least nine landslides, sending rocks tumbling onto Suhua Highway in Hualien, according to local media reports. Rail services were halted at one point across the island.

The earthquake, with an epicenter off Taiwan’s east coast, struck during the morning commute, shortly before 8 a.m. Taiwanese authorities said by 3 p.m., more than 100 aftershocks, many of them stronger than magnitude 5, had rumbled through the area.

In the capital, Taipei, buildings shook for over a minute from the initial quake. Taiwan is at the intersection of the Philippine Sea tectonic plate and the Eurasian plate, making it vulnerable to seismic activity. Hualien sits on multiple active faults, and 17 people died in a quake there in 2018.

Here is the latest:

The earthquake hit Taiwan as many people there were preparing to travel for Tomb Sweeping Day, a holiday across the Chinese-speaking world when people mourn the dead and make offerings at their graves. Officials warned the public to stay away from visiting tombs in mountain areas as a precaution, especially because rain was forecast in the coming days.

TSMC, the world’s biggest maker of advanced semiconductors, briefly evacuated workers from its factories but said a few hours later that they were returning to work. Chip production is highly precise, and even short shutdowns can cost millions of dollars.

Christopher Buckley

Christopher Buckley

Lai Ching-te, Taiwan’s vice president, who is also its president-elect, visited the city of Hualien this afternoon to assess the destruction and the rescue efforts, a government announcement said. Mr. Lai, who will become president in May, said the most urgent tasks were rescuing trapped residents and providing medical care. Next, Mr. Lai said, public services must be restored, including transportation, water and power. He said Taiwan Railway’s eastern line could be reopened by Thursday night.

Meaghan Tobin

Taiwan’s fire department has updated its figures, reporting that nine people have died and 934 others have been injured in the quake. Fifty-six people in Hualien County remain trapped.

Shake intensity

Taiwan’s fire department reports that nine people have died and 882 others have been injured in Taiwan. In Hualien County, 131 people remain trapped.

Agnes Chang

Agnes Chang

Footage shows rocks tumbling down one side of Guishan Island, a popular spot for hiking known as Turtle Island, off the northeast coast of Taiwan. Officials said no fishermen or tourists were injured after the landslide.

Video player loading

The death toll has risen to nine, according to Taiwan government statistics.

Meaghan Tobin, Siyi Zhao

Meaghan Tobin, Siyi Zhao

Officials in Taiwan warned residents to not visit their relatives' tombs, especially in the mountains, this weekend during the holiday, known as Ching Ming, meant to honor them. There had already been 100 aftershocks and the forecast called for rain, which could make travel conditions on damaged roads more treacherous.

Crews are working to reach people trapped on blocked roads. As of 1 p.m. local time, roads were impassable due to damage and fallen rock in 19 places, according to the Ministry of Transportation. At least 77 people remain trapped. A bridge before Daqingshui Tunnel appeared to have completely collapsed.

Taiwan’s worst rail disaster in decades — a train derailment in 2021 that killed 49 people — took place on the first day of the Tomb Sweeping holiday period that year, in the same region as the earthquake.

The earthquake hit Taiwan as many people here were preparing to travel for Tomb Sweeping Day, or Ching Ming, a day across the Chinese-speaking world when people mourn their dead, especially by making offerings at their graves. Now those plans will be disrupted for many Taiwanese.

The holiday weekend would typically see a spike in travel as people visit family across Taiwan. Currently, both rail transport and highways are blocked in parts of Hualien, said Transport Minister Wang Guo-cai. Work is underway to restore rail transportation in Hualien, and two-way traffic is expected to be restored at noon on Thursday, he said.

Mike Ives

Taiwan’s preparedness has evolved in response to past quakes.

Taiwan’s earthquake preparedness has evolved over the past few decades in response to some of the island’s largest and most destructive quakes .

In the years after a 7.6 magnitude earthquake in central Taiwan killed nearly 2,500 people in 1999, the authorities established an urban search-and-rescue team and opened several emergency medical operation centers, among other measures .

And in 2018, after a quake in the eastern coastal city of Hualien killed 17 people and caused several buildings to partially collapse, the government ordered a wave of building inspections .

Taiwan has also been improving its early warning system for earthquakes since the 1980s. And two years ago, it rolled out new building codes that, among other things, require owners of vulnerable buildings to install ad-hoc structural reinforcements.

So how well prepared was Taiwan when a 7.4 magnitude quake struck near Hualien on Wednesday morning, killing at least seven people and injuring hundreds more?

Across the island, one building collapsed entirely, 15 others were in a state of partial collapse and another 67 were damaged, the island’s fire department said on Wednesday afternoon . Structural engineers could not immediately be reached for comment to assess that damage, or the extent to which building codes and other regulations might have either contributed to it or prevented worse destruction.

As for search-and-rescue preparedness, Taiwan is generally in very good shape, said Steve Glassey, an expert in disaster response who lives in New Zealand.

“ The skill sets, the capabilities, the equipment, the training is second to none,” said Dr. Glassey, who worked with Taipei’s urban search-and-rescue team during the response to a devastating 2011 earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand. “They’re a very sharp operation.”

But even the best urban search-and-rescue team will be stretched thin if an earthquake causes multiple buildings to collapse, Dr. Glassey said.

Taiwan has options for requesting international help with search-and-rescue efforts. It could directly ask another country, or countries, to send personnel. And if multiple teams were to get involved, it could ask the United Nations to help coordinate them, as it did after the 1999 earthquake.

Pierre Peron, a spokesman for the United Nations, said on Wednesday afternoon that no such request had yet been made as a result of the latest earthquake.

Meaghan Tobin contributed reporting.

At least seven people have died and 736 have been injured as a result of the earthquake, according to Taiwan’s fire department. Another 77 people remained trapped in Hualien County, many of them on hiking trails. Search and rescue operations are underway, said the fire department.

Siyi Zhao

Aftershocks of magnitudes between 6.5 and 7 were likely to occur over the next three or four days, said Wu Chien-fu, director of the Taiwanese Central Weather Administration’s Seismology Center, at a news conference.

As of 2 p.m., 711 people had been injured across Taiwan, the fire department said, and 77 people in Hualien County remained trapped. The four who were known to have died were in Hualien.

Victoria Kim

Hualien County is a quiet and scenic tourist destination.

Hualien County on Taiwan’s east coast is a scenic, sleepy tourist area tucked away from the island’s urban centers, with a famous gorge and aquamarine waters. It also happens to sit on several active faults , making it prone to earthquakes.

The county has a population of about 300,000, according to the 2020 census, about a third of whom live in the coastal city of Hualien, the county seat. It is one of the most sparsely populated parts of Taiwan. About three hours by train from the capital, Taipei, the city describes itself as the first place on the island that’s touched by the sun.

Hualien County is home to Taroko National Park, one of Taiwan’s most popular scenic areas. Visitors come to explore the Taroko Gorge, a striated marble canyon carved by the Liwu River, which cuts through mountains that rise steeply from the coast. The city of Hualien is a popular destination as a gateway to the national park.

According to the state-owned Central News Agency, three hikers were trapped on a trail near the entrance to the gorge on Wednesday, after the quake sent rocks falling. Two of them were found dead, the news agency said. Administrators said many roads within the park had been cut off by the earthquake, potentially trapping hikers, according to the report.

Earthquakes have rattled Hualien with some regularity. In 2018, 17 people were killed and hundreds of others injured when a magnitude 6.5 quake struck just before midnight, its epicenter a short distance northeast of the city of Hualien.

Many of the victims in that quake were in a 12-story building that was severely tilted, the first four floors of which were largely crushed, according to news reports from the time. The next year, the area was shaken by a 6.1-magnitude earthquake that injured 17 people.

The area has some of the highest concentrations of Taiwan’s aboriginal population, with several of the island’s Indigenous tribes calling the county home .

The county government in Hualien released a list of people that had been hospitalized with injuries, which stood at 118 people as of midday Wednesday.

Across Taiwan, one building fell down entirely, in Changhua County on the west coast, and 15 buildings partially collapsed, Taiwan’s fire department said. Another 67 buildings were damaged. One of the partially collapsed structures was a warehouse in New Taipei City where four people were rescued, according to Taiwan’s Central News Agency. Another 12 were rescued at a separate New Taipei City building where the foundation sank into the ground.

Peggy Jiang, who manages The Good Kid, a children’s bookstore down the street from the partially collapsed Uranus Building in Hualien, said it was a good thing they had yet to open when the quake struck. The area is now blocked off by police and rescue vehicles. “Most people in Hualien are used to earthquakes,” she said. “But this one was particularly scary, many people ran in the street immediately afterward.”

Lin Jung, 36, who manages a shop selling sneakers in Hualien, said he had been at home getting ready to take his 16-month-old baby to a medical appointment when the earthquake struck. He said it felt at first like a series of small shocks, then “suddenly it turned to an intense earthquake shaking up and down.” The glass cover of a ceiling lamp fell and shattered. “All I could do was protect my baby.”

newspaper report year 2

Chris Buckley ,  Paul Mozur ,  Meaghan Tobin and John Yoon

The earthquake damaged buildings and a highway in Hualien.

The magnitude 7.4 earthquake that struck Taiwan on Wednesday damaged many buildings and a major highway in Hualien, a city on the eastern coast, and it knocked out power as it rocked the island.

Across Taiwan, the quake and its aftershocks caused one building to completely collapse and 15 others to partially collapse, according to Taiwan’s fire department. Sixty-seven other buildings sustained damage.

Two tall buildings in Hualien that sustained particularly extensive damage were at the center of the rescue efforts there. Most damage across the city was not life-threatening, said Huang Hsuan-wan, a reporter for a local news site.

Where buildings were reported damaged in Hualien City

“A lot of roads were blocked off. There are a lot of walls toppled over onto cars,” Derik du Plessis, 44, a South African resident of Hualien, said shortly after the earthquake. He described people rushing around the city to check on their houses and pick up their children. One of his friends lost her house, he said.

One of the damaged buildings in Hualien, a 10-story structure called the Uranus Building that housed a mix of homes and shops, was tilted over and appeared to be on the verge of collapse. Many of its residents managed to flee, but some were missing, said Sunny Wang, a journalist based in the city. Rescuers were trying to reach the basement, concerned that people might be trapped there.

Photographs of the initial damage in Hualien showed another building, a five-story structure, leaning to one side, with crushed motorcycles visible at the ground-floor level. Bricks had fallen off another high-rise, leaving cracks and holes in the walls.

The quake also set off at least nine landslides on Suhua Highway in Hualien, according to Taiwan’s Central News Agency, which said part of the road had collapsed.

Taiwan’s fire department said four people had been killed in the earthquake.

John Yoon

Across Taiwan, 40 flights have been canceled or delayed because of the earthquake, according to Taiwan’s Central Emergency Operation Center.

President Tsai Ing-wen visited Taiwan’s national emergency response center this morning, where she was briefed about the response efforts underway by members of the ministries of defense, transportation, economic affairs and agriculture, as well as the fire department.

A look at Taiwan’s strongest earthquakes.

The magnitude 7.4 earthquake that hit Taiwan on Wednesday morning was the strongest in 25 years, the island’s Central Weather Administration said.

At least four people died after the quake struck off Taiwan’s east coast, officials said.

Here’s a look back at some of the major earthquakes in modern Taiwanese history:

Taichung, 1935

Taiwan’s deadliest quake registered a magnitude of 7.1 and struck near the island’s west coast in April 1935, killing more than 3,200 people, according to the Central Weather Administration. More than 12,000 others were injured and more than 50,000 homes were destroyed or damaged.

Tainan, 1941

A magnitude 7.3 earthquake in December 1941, which struck southwestern Taiwan, caused several hundred deaths, the United States Geological Survey said.

Chi-Chi, 1999

A 7.6 magnitude earthquake in central Taiwan killed nearly 2,500 people in September 1999. The quake, which struck about 90 miles south-southwest of Taipei, was the second-deadliest in the island’s history, according to the U.S.G.S. and the Central Weather Administration. More than 10,000 people were injured and more than 100,000 homes were destroyed or damaged.

Yujing, 2016

A 6.4 magnitude earthquake in February 2016 caused a 17-story apartment complex in southwestern Taiwan to collapse, killing at least 114 people . The U.S.G.S. later said that 90 earthquakes of that scale or greater had occurred within 250 kilometers, or 155 miles, of that quake’s location over the previous 100 years.

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A damaged building in Hualien, after a major earthquake hit Taiwan's east.

Taiwan earthquake: nine dead and 900 injured as buildings collapse

Dozens believed trapped and awaiting rescue after island hit by 7.2-magnitude quake, its strongest in 25 years

‘People were screaming’: Hualien residents in shock after Taiwan earthquake

Taiwan’s strongest earthquake in 25 years has killed nine people and injured at least 900, causing building collapses, power outages and landslides on the island, and triggering initial tsunami warnings in southern Japan and the Philippines.

The fire agency said 64 people were trapped in one coalmine, and six in another, while rescue workers had lost contact with 50 people who were travelling in minibuses through a national park as the earthquake wiped out phone networks.

The quake, given a magnitude of 7.2 by Taiwan’s earthquake monitoring agency and 7.4 by the US, struck close to Hualien, a city popular with tourists on Taiwan’s eastern coast, damaging buildings and trapping people amid aftershocks after the quake, which started at 7.58am.

Videos on social media showed children being rescued from collapsed residential buildings. One five-storey building in Hualien appeared heavily damaged, its first floor collapsed and the bulk of the building leaning at a 45-degree angle.

Taroko national park in Hualien said nearly 1,000 tourists and staff were stranded in its mountains. Local media reported that three hikers and one driver died after rockslides in the park.

Taiwan’s Centre for Science and Technology (CST) said people and vehicles were trapped in the Dachingshui tunnel. Train lines were also damaged, and schools and workplaces were closed across large areas of the city. Tens of thousands of homes were without power.

Witnesses in Hualien described driving while rocks dislodged from nearby mountains fell down around them, while others rushed outside after feeling the strength of the tremors.

People rescue a child from a partially collapsed building

Farther north, part of the headland of Guishan Island, a tourist attraction also known as Turtle Island because of its shape, slid into the sea. In the capital, Taipei, several people were rescued from a partly collapsed warehouse, and tiles fell from buildings.

Although it was measured at 7.7 in Japan , Taiwan’s earthquake monitoring agency gave the magnitude of Wednesday’s quake as 7.2, making it Taiwan’s strongest since 1999, when a 7.6-magnitude quake 93 miles (150km) south of Taipei killed 2,400 and injured 10,000.

Hualien’s last big quake in 2022, recorded as 6.9 magnitude, toppled buildings and derailed a train, killing one person and cutting off power for thousands of residents.

Wednesday’s quake caused TSMC, Taiwan’s leading semiconductor manufacturer, which is responsible for the production of most of the world’s advanced semiconductors, to evacuate its production lines, according to Bloomberg News.

Taiwan’s CST said more than 15 aftershocks exceeding a magnitude of 4.0 had occurred so far, but the magnitude had been decreasing.

Damage was visible on some buildings in central Taipei, such as outside the Howard Plaza hotel, where the earthquake had damaged brickwork and dislodged some of the lettering on the hotel’s sign.

Mike Hung Hsu, a hotel guest from the US, said he was woken up by the earthquake. “I’ve never felt this kind of earthquake in LA, even though we have earthquakes pretty often,” he said. “I used to live in Taiwan, in my memory we never had an earthquake like this one.”

Japanese media initially said the quake could trigger waves as high as 3 metres in some areas of Okinawa prefecture, located roughly 1,600km south of Tokyo, but the forecasts were later downgraded. Japan’s meteorological agency lifted all tsunami advisories at around noon local time, while the chief cabinet secretary, Yoshimasa Hayashi, said there had been no reports of injury or damage.

However, an official from Japan’s meteorological agency urged people to continue evacuating until the advisory was lifted. Some residents of the main Okinawa island had evacuated to a nearby US military base, media reports said, while footage showed others watching the sea from the safety of high ground in the prefectural capital, Naha.

The agency has warned that aftershocks, with a similar intensity to those felt in Taiwan, may be likely over the next week.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) said the quake’s epicentre was 18km (11 miles) south of Taiwan’s Hualien city at a depth of 34.8km.

The Philippines’ seismology agency on Wednesday issued a tsunami warning for coastal areas fronting the Pacific Ocean, saying they were expected to experience “high tsunami waves” but later lifted the warning.

Rescuers search toppled buildings after powerful Taiwan quake – video report

It has been only three months since a magnitude-7.6 quake and tsunami killed 244 people and caused widespread damage on the Noto peninsula in Ishikawa prefecture on the Japan Sea coast.

Japan’s biggest earthquake on record was a 9.0-magnitude undersea jolt in March 2011 off Japan’s north-east coast, which triggered a tsunami that left about 18,500 people dead or missing.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said it was “highly concerned” about the earthquake, which was also felt in coastal cities in China’s Fujian province, and offered to provide assistance.

Additional reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter

  • Asia Pacific
  • Earthquakes

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Gross Domestic Product, Fourth Quarter and Year 2023 (Third Estimate), GDP by Industry, and Corporate Profits

  • News Release
  • Related Materials
  • Additional Information

Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 3.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2023 (table 1), according to the "third" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the third quarter, real GDP increased 4.9 percent.

The GDP estimate released today is based on more complete source data than were available for the "second" estimate issued last month. In the second estimate, the increase in real GDP was 3.2 percent. The update primarily reflected upward revisions to consumer spending and nonresidential fixed investment that were partly offset by a downward revision to private inventory investment (refer to "Updates to GDP").

Real GDP: Percent change from preceding quarter

The increase in real GDP primarily reflected increases in consumer spending, state and local government spending, exports, nonresidential fixed investment, federal government spending, and residential fixed investment that were partly offset by a decrease in private inventory investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, increased (table 2).

Compared to the third quarter of 2023, the deceleration in real GDP in the fourth quarter primarily reflected a downturn in private inventory investment and slowdowns in federal government spending and residential fixed investment. Imports decelerated.

Current‑dollar GDP increased 5.1 percent at an annual rate, or $346.9 billion, in the fourth quarter to a level of $27.96 trillion, an upward revision of $12.4 billion from the previous estimate (tables 1 and 3). More information on the source data that underlie the estimates is available in the " Key Source Data and Assumptions " file on BEA's website.

The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 1.9 percent in the fourth quarter, the same as in the previous estimate (table 4). The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 1.8 percent, the same as the previous estimate, and the PCE index excluding food and energy prices increased 2.0 percent, a downward revision of 0.1 percentage point.

Personal Income

Current-dollar personal income increased $230.2 billion in the fourth quarter, an upward revision of $10.7 billion from the previous estimate. The increase primarily reflected increases in compensation, personal income receipts on assets, and proprietors' income (table 8).

Disposable personal income increased $190.4 billion, or 3.8 percent, in the fourth quarter, a downward revision of $12.1 billion from the previous estimate. Real disposable personal income increased 2.0 percent, a downward revision of 0.2 percentage point.

Personal saving was $815.5 billion in the fourth quarter, an upward revision of $6.3 billion from the previous estimate. The personal saving rate —personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income—was 4.0 percent in the fourth quarter, an upward revision of 0.1 percentage point.

Gross Domestic Income and Corporate Profits

Real gross domestic income (GDI) increased 4.8 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with an increase of 1.9 percent in the third quarter. The average of real GDP and real GDI , a supplemental measure of U.S. economic activity that equally weights GDP and GDI, increased 4.1 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with an increase of 3.4 percent (table 1).

Profits from current production (corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments) increased $133.5 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with an increase of $108.7 billion in the third quarter (table 10).

Profits of domestic financial corporations increased $5.9 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with an increase of $9.0 billion in the third quarter. Profits of domestic nonfinancial corporations increased $136.5 billion, compared with an increase of $90.8 billion. Rest-of-the-world profits decreased $8.9 billion, in contrast to an increase of $8.8 billion. In the fourth quarter, receipts decreased $20.1 billion, and payments decreased $11.2 billion.

Updates to GDP

With the third estimate, upward revisions to consumer spending, nonresidential fixed investment, and state and local government spending were partly offset by downward revisions to private inventory investment and exports. Imports were revised down. For more information, refer to the Technical Note . For information on updates to GDP, refer to the "Additional Information" section that follows.

Real GDP by Industry

Today's release includes estimates of GDP by industry , or value added—a measure of an industry's contribution to GDP. Private goods-producing industries increased 7.0 percent, private services-producing industries increased 2.6 percent, and government increased 3.1 percent (table 12). Overall, 18 of 22 industry groups contributed to the fourth-quarter increase in real GDP.

  • Within private goods-producing industries, the leading contributors to the increase were nondurable goods manufacturing (led by petroleum and coal products and chemical products), durable goods manufacturing (led by machinery), and construction (table 13).
  • Within private services-producing industries, the leading contributors to the increase were retail trade (led by motor vehicle and parts dealers), health care and social assistance (led by ambulatory health care services), utilities, and professional, scientific, and technical services (led by computer systems design and related services).
  • The increase in government reflected increases in state and local government as well as federal government.

Real GDP by Industry

Gross Output by Industry

Real gross output —principally a measure of an industry's sales or receipts, which includes sales to final users in the economy (GDP) and sales to other industries (intermediate inputs)—increased 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter. This reflected an increase of 3.7 percent for private goods-producing industries, an increase of 2.0 percent for private services-producing industries, and an increase of 1.8 percent for government (table 16). Overall, 13 of 22 industry groups contributed to the increase in real gross output.

GDP for 2023

Real GDP increased 2.5 percent in 2023 (from the 2022 annual level to the 2023 annual level), compared with an increase of 1.9 percent in 2022 (table 1). The increase in real GDP in 2023 primarily reflected increases in consumer spending, nonresidential fixed investment, state and local government spending, exports, and federal government spending that were partly offset by decreases in residential fixed investment and private inventory investment. Imports decreased (table 2).

Gross Domestic Income and Corporate Profits for 2023

Real GDI increased 0.5 percent in 2023, compared with an increase of 2.1 percent in 2022 (table 1). The average of real GDP and real GDI increased 1.5 percent in 2023, compared with an increase of 2.0 percent in 2022.

In 2023, profits from current production (corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments) increased $49.3 billion, compared with an increase of $285.9 billion in 2022 (table 10). Profits of domestic financial corporations decreased $55.2 billion, compared with a decrease of $0.9 billion in 2022. Profits of domestic nonfinancial corporations increased $66.6 billion, compared with an increase of $247.6 billion. Rest-of-the-world profits increased $37.9 billion, compared with an increase of $39.2 billion.

Real GDP by Industry for 2023

In 2023, private goods-producing industries increased 2.7 percent, private services-producing industries increased 2.7 percent, and government increased 1.4 percent. Overall, 17 of 22 industry groups contributed to the increase in real GDP (table 13).

  • Within private goods-producing industries, the leading contributor to the increase was mining.
  • The increase in private services-producing industries was led by retail trade; professional, scientific, and technical services; health care and social assistance; and information. These increases were partly offset by decreases in finance and insurance as well as wholesale trade.

Real GDP by Industry

Real gross output increased 2.1 percent in 2023. Private goods-producing industries increased 2.0 percent, private services-producing industries increased 2.1 percent, and government increased 2.2 percent (table 16). Overall, 17 of 22 industry groups contributed to the increase in real gross output.

*          *          *

Next release, April 25, 2024, at 8:30 a.m. EDT Gross Domestic Product, First Quarter 2024 (Advance Estimate)

Full Release & Tables (PDF)

Technical note (pdf), tables only (excel), release highlights (pdf), historical comparisons (pdf), key source data and assumptions (excel), revision information.

Additional resources available at www.bea.gov :

  • Stay informed about BEA developments by reading the BEA blog , signing up for BEA's email subscription service , or following BEA on X, formerly known as Twitter @BEA_News .
  • Historical time series for these estimates can be accessed in BEA's interactive data application .
  • Access BEA data by registering for BEA's data Application Programming Interface (API).
  • For more on BEA's statistics, refer to our online journal, the Survey of Current Business .
  • BEA's news release schedule
  • NIPA Handbook : Concepts and Methods of the U.S. National Income and Product Accounts

Definitions

Gross domestic product (GDP), or value added , is the value of the goods and services produced by the nation's economy less the value of the goods and services used up in production. GDP is also equal to the sum of personal consumption expenditures, gross private domestic investment, net exports of goods and services, and government consumption expenditures and gross investment.

Gross domestic income (GDI) is the sum of incomes earned and costs incurred in the production of GDP. In national economic accounting, GDP and GDI are conceptually equal. In practice, GDP and GDI differ because they are constructed using largely independent source data.

Gross output is the value of the goods and services produced by the nation's economy. It is principally measured using industry sales or receipts, including sales to final users (GDP) and sales to other industries (intermediate inputs).

Current-dollar estimates are valued in the prices of the period when the transactions occurred—that is, at "market value." Also referred to as "nominal estimates" or as "current-price estimates."

Real values are inflation-adjusted estimates—that is, estimates that exclude the effects of price changes.

The gross domestic purchases price index measures the prices of final goods and services purchased by U.S. residents.

The personal consumption expenditure price index measures the prices paid for the goods and services purchased by, or on the behalf of, "persons."

Personal income is the income received by, or on behalf of, all persons from all sources: from participation as laborers in production, from owning a home or business, from the ownership of financial assets, and from government and business in the form of transfers. It includes income from domestic sources as well as the rest of world. It does not include realized or unrealized capital gains or losses.

Disposable personal income is the income available to persons for spending or saving. It is equal to personal income less personal current taxes.

Personal outlays is the sum of personal consumption expenditures, personal interest payments, and personal current transfer payments.

Personal saving is personal income less personal outlays and personal current taxes.

The personal saving rate is personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income.

Profits from current production , referred to as corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) and capital consumption (CCAdj) adjustment in the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPAs), is a measure of the net income of corporations before deducting income taxes that is consistent with the value of goods and services measured in GDP. The IVA and CCAdj are adjustments that convert inventory withdrawals and depreciation of fixed assets reported on a tax-return, historical-cost basis to the current-cost economic measures used in the national income and product accounts. Profits for domestic industries reflect profits for all corporations located within the geographic borders of the United States. The rest-of-the-world (ROW) component of profits is measured as the difference between profits received from ROW and profits paid to ROW.

For more definitions, refer to the Glossary: National Income and Product Accounts .

Statistical conventions

Annual-vs-quarterly rates . Quarterly seasonally adjusted values are expressed at annual rates, unless otherwise specified. This convention is used for BEA's featured, seasonally adjusted measures to facilitate comparisons with related and historical data. For details, refer to the FAQ " Why does BEA publish estimates at annual rates? "

Quarterly not seasonally adjusted values are expressed only at quarterly rates.

Percent changes . Percent changes in quarterly seasonally adjusted series are displayed at annual rates, unless otherwise specified. For details, refer to the FAQ " How is average annual growth calculated? " and " Why does BEA publish percent changes in quarterly series at annual rates? " Percent changes in quarterly not seasonally adjusted values are calculated from the same quarter one year ago. All published percent changes are calculated from unrounded data.

Calendar years and quarters . Unless noted otherwise, annual and quarterly data are presented on a calendar basis.

Quantities and prices . Quantities, or "real" volume measures, and prices are expressed as index numbers with a specified reference year equal to 100 (currently 2017). Quantity and price indexes are calculated using a Fisher-chained weighted formula that incorporates weights from two adjacent periods (quarters for quarterly data and annuals for annual data). For details on the calculation of quantity and price indexes, refer to Chapter 4: Estimating Methods in the NIPA Handbook .

Chained-dollar values are calculated by multiplying the quantity index by the current dollar value in the reference year (2017) and then dividing by 100. Percent changes calculated from real quantity indexes and chained-dollar levels are conceptually the same; any differences are due to rounding. Chained-dollar values are not additive because the relative weights for a given period differ from those of the reference year. In tables that display chained-dollar values, a "residual" line shows the difference between the sum of detailed chained-dollar series and its corresponding aggregate.

BEA releases three vintages of the current quarterly estimate for GDP. "Advance" estimates are released near the end of the first month following the end of the quarter and are based on source data that are incomplete or subject to further revision by the source agency. "Second" and "third" estimates are released near the end of the second and third months, respectively, and are based on more detailed and more comprehensive data as they become available.

The table below shows the average revisions to the quarterly percent changes in real GDP between different estimate vintages, without regard to sign.

Annual and comprehensive updates are released in late September. Annual updates generally cover at least the five most recent calendar years (and their associated quarters) and incorporate newly available major annual source data as well as some changes in methods and definitions to improve the accounts. Comprehensive (or benchmark) updates are carried out at about 5-year intervals and incorporate major periodic source data, as well as major conceptual improvements.

Unlike GDP, advance current quarterly estimates of GDI and corporate profits are not released because data on domestic profits and net interest of domestic industries are not available. For fourth quarter estimates, these data are not available until the third estimate.

GDP by industry and gross output estimates are released with the third estimate of GDP.

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Spotify to Raise Prices Later This Year: Report

By Jem Aswad

Executive Editor, Music

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Spotify

Spotify , which increased the cost of its U.S. monthly subscriptions less than a year ago, plans to raise the price of its paid-subscription service in several overseas markets at by the end of this month, and in the U.S. later this year, according to a report published by Bloomberg on Wednesday.

The report was followed by a boost in the company’s stock price.

While Spotify led the charge for streaming and in the process effectively saved the music industry after years of steep decline, it has struggled for profitability, largely due to the fact that it pays out billions of dollars every year in royalties to major music companies and other rights holders — some $9 billion on $13.2 billion in revenue in 2023. It began raising subscription prices, after years of resistance, last year, following similar increases by its competitors.

While multiple studies have shown that people are generally willing to pay more for music-streaming subscriptions, Spotify has worked to offer more for any price increase, with recent talk of early access to new music and other fan-centric options. The report also states that the company will be introducing new pricing tiers, including one for a “supremium” plan that would offer access to high-fidelity audio at a higher price, although the company said it was sidelining such efforts a couple of years ago.

Contacted by Variety, a rep for Spotify swiftly declined comment.

Spotify most recently reported some 236 million paying customers, making it the world’s largest paid subscription service by a wide margin. The report states, “The success of [last year’s] price increase has given management confidence to seek even more.”

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Taiwan's strongest earthquake in 25 years kills 9 people, 50 missing

  • Earthquake kills nine, more than 900 injured
  • Fifty on minibuses heading to national park missing
  • Epicentre just off Taiwan's sparsely populated east coast
  • Workers return to semiconductor giant TSMC facilities

Shaking from an earthquake near Taiwan’s eastern shore was felt across the island nation and parts of mainland China and Japan on Wednesday morning.

FIGHTER JETS

Workers walk at the site where a building collapsed following an earthquake, in Hualien

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Shaking from an earthquake near Taiwan’s eastern shore was felt across the island nation and parts of mainland China and Japan on Wednesday morning. The Wednesday quake was the strongest to hit the island nation in about 25 years.

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Reporting by Yimou Lee and Fabian Hamacher, Shanghai and Hong Kong newsrooms; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Clarence Fernandez, Chizu Nomiyama, Alison Williams and Josie Kao

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newspaper report year 2

Thomson Reuters

Yimou Lee is a Senior Correspondent for Reuters covering everything from Taiwan, including sensitive Taiwan-China relations, China's military aggression and Taiwan's key role as a global semiconductor powerhouse. A three-time SOPA award winner, his reporting from Hong Kong, China, Myanmar and Taiwan over the past decade includes Myanmar's crackdown on Rohingya Muslims, Hong Kong protests and Taiwan's battle against China's multifront campaigns to absorb the island.

A drone view shows mine workers trapped in a landslide-struck mountainous area, following the earthquake, in Hualien

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Writing a newspaper report- KS2- Y3- English two week unit planning

Writing a newspaper report- KS2- Y3- English two week unit planning

Subject: English

Age range: 7-11

Resource type: Other

AmyWarner09's Shop

Last updated

21 March 2018

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pptx, 69.38 KB

A pack of work for two weeks of English lessons building up to writing a newspaper report about a missing teddy kidnapped by pirates. The planning is based on the teaching sequence which follows the structure of: Immerse, Analyse, SPAG, Plan, Write, Review. The pack contains weekly planning, flipcharts and differentiated activities.

The SPAG aspects covered are: descriptive language, past tense, punctuation and complex senrences.

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IMAGES

  1. Example Of A Newspaper Report Ks2 : Journalist writing

    newspaper report year 2

  2. Newspaper Report Example KS2

    newspaper report year 2

  3. How to write a newspaper report

    newspaper report year 2

  4. How to write a newspaper report

    newspaper report year 2

  5. how to write a newspaper report ks2

    newspaper report year 2

  6. Features of a Newspaper Report KS2 Poster

    newspaper report year 2

VIDEO

  1. Oral rehearsal, non-chronological report Year 2

  2. 21 मार्च की बहुत बड़ी खबर

  3. News Paper Report|PLUS TWO ENGLISH

  4. Why So Many People Leave Bank Job

  5. Report Writing

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COMMENTS

  1. Y2 Recounts: Newspaper Report Model/ Example Text

    This Newspaper Report Model includes a full example news story, as well as annotated spelling, grammar, and punctuation notes. Our PowerPoint presentation provides a handy breakdown of the different parts of a newspaper report. De-constructing long pieces of writing in this way helps KS1 children understand how they have been created.

  2. Y2 Recounts: Newspaper Report Model/ Example Text

    5 tips for writing a good newspaper report. Compose a snappy headline that will grab the attention of readers. Include a byline e.g. Tom Smith, Sports Correspondent. Set the scene. Summarise your story in the 'lead' paragraph. Write the main body of your report. Speak concisely, including accurate quotes and references.

  3. Lesson: To write a newspaper report

    To write a newspaper report. To write a newspaper report. Download all resources. Share activities with pupils. To write a newspaper report. Download all resources. Share activities with pupils. Slide deck. Lesson details. Video. Slide deck. ... 1 Scott Place, 2 Hardman Street, Manchester, M3 3AA ...

  4. Newspaper Reports

    Looks at the basic features of a newspaper report. Creative Commons "Sharealike" Reviews. 4.6 Something went wrong, please try again later. cpugh3051. 2 years ago ... Something went wrong, please try again later. cpugh3051. 2 years ago. report. 5. Great PPT . Empty reply does not make any sense for the end user. Submit reply Cancel. Anulka1979 ...

  5. KS2 Teaching Tips: How To Write A Good Newspaper Report

    Check out blog 'KS2 Teaching Tips: How To Write A Good Newspaper Report' for plenty of top tips and KS2 newspaper report resources to inspire your planning. ... Foundation - Year 2 . Australian Curriculum Resources English Mathematics Science Humanities and Social Sciences The Arts Technologies Health and Physical Education Languages STEM.

  6. Newspaper reports

    Our newspaper templates will help children with newspaper report planning before writing their own newspaper headlines and news reports. You may also be interested in our writing resource packs: Writing non-fiction (lower KS2) and Writing non-fiction (upper KS2) which include lesson plans, newspaper report examples and WAGOLL texts. Resources.

  7. Year 2 (Ages 6-7) Writing a Recount: Video Lesson 2

    The second lesson in our Writing a Recount series, this KS1 Identifying Features of a Newspaper Report Video Lesson will teach students important skills they can use when writing a recount. It's a versatile and engaging resource that includes the following benefits:Shows that newspaper reports are a type of recount.Gives plenty of examples of newspaper reports.Lesson is planned and ...

  8. Reports and Recounts

    Pollution News Report: File Size: 155 kb: File Type: docx: Download File. A Teachers Winter Holiday: File Size: 25 kb: File Type: docx: Download File. Blizzard Causes Chaos: ... discovers that youth teams are being selected to play in exhibition matches at the World Cup tournament later that year he decides to enter North Star. There's one problem.

  9. Year 2

    Joint composition: First week Joint Composition for big writing. Focus on sequencing events and structure of text. Independent writing: writing own newspaper report about the Great Fire of London. Have a check of our website: www.theteachingcouple.com there are lots of articles and resources to help out experienced teachers, ECTs and SLT alike.

  10. KS2 newspaper report

    These creative KS2 newspaper report ideas and resources will inspire your students and make learning about news reporting exciting. ... Reception Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 Year 6 Year 7 Year 8 Year 9 Year 10 Year 11 ...

  11. KS2 Newspaper Report Worksheets

    These differentiated newspaper template docs will support children when writing their own report, using appropriate newspaper language (KS2) and style. ... Grade1 / Year 2 . 7 - 8 years old . Grade 2 / Year 3 . 8 - 9 years old . Grade 3 / Year 4 . 9 - 10 years old ...

  12. Newspaper Reports

    Discover handy tips for writing a newspaper report or an article through our KS2 newspaper templates, display resource, PowerPoints, worksheets & more. Recently Viewed and Downloaded › ... 6 - 7 years old . Year 2 . 7 - 8 years old . Year 3 . 8 - 9 years old . Year 4 . 9 - 10 years old . Year 5 ...

  13. Features of a NewsPaper Report Lesson

    Features of a News Paper Report Lesson. KS2 English writing lesson to enhance children's newspaper reports using emotive language. Lesson pack includes…. Lesson Plan, News Report example, Colour coded features checklist, Lesson designed to support the writing of newspaper reports. Lesson included in News Report Writing - Planning, Lessons ...

  14. Y2 Recounts: Newspaper Report Model/ Example Text

    5 tips for writing a good newspaper report. Compose a snappy headline that will grab the attention of readers. Include a byline e.g. Tom Smith, Sports Correspondent. Set the scene. Summarise your story in the 'lead' paragraph. Write the main body of your report. Speak concisely, including accurate quotes and references.

  15. PDF Great Fire of London

    Great Fire of London | Newspaper Reports : English : Year 2 ... (A fuller list of suffixes can be found on page 56 in the year 2 spelling section in English Appendix 1) • Use of the suffixes -er, -est in adjectives and the use of -ly in Standard English to turn adjectives into adverbs

  16. Features of a Newspaper article Checklist (Teacher-Made)

    The key features are: The name of the newspaper. A headline that uses a pun, rhyme, or alliteration to catch the readers' eye. A subtitle that gives a bit more information about what the article is about. The journalist's name. An introductory paragraph that contains the 5 Ws (what, when, who, why)

  17. The Newspaper Reports Pack

    Enhance your children's newspaper report writing skills with this fantastic collection of teaching, activity and display resources! Includes a comprehensive ...

  18. Newspaper Report Example

    This fantastic pack is great for explaining all about the features of a newspaper report to children. After downloading it, you'll find:the example text titled 'Baggins is Back!', exploring the tale of Bilbo Baggins' return to the Shire, including annotated versions pointing out the different features;a genre features checklist;an 'I can' checklist for pupils;a newspaper report PowerPoint ...

  19. Strong Taiwan Quake Kills 9, Injures Hundreds

    Many of the victims in that quake were in a 12-story building that was severely tilted, the first four floors of which were largely crushed, according to news reports from the time. The next year ...

  20. Taiwan earthquake: nine dead and 900 injured as buildings collapse

    Dozens believed trapped and awaiting rescue after island hit by 7.2-magnitude quake, its strongest in 25 years Taiwan's strongest earthquake in 25 years has killed nine people and injured at ...

  21. Newspaper Report Example

    What should a Year 6 Recount - Newspaper Report text look like? Use this handy example text pack to help you to either provide an ideal example for your class or moderate children's writing, according to the 2014 National Curriculum requirements for English. The example report that we have included, is a fun and exciting story of a hobbit.

  22. Gross Domestic Product, Fourth Quarter and Year 2023 (Third Estimate

    Gross Output by Industry. Real gross output—principally a measure of an industry's sales or receipts, which includes sales to final users in the economy (GDP) and sales to other industries (intermediate inputs)—increased 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter.This reflected an increase of 3.7 percent for private goods-producing industries, an increase of 2.0 percent for private services ...

  23. Y2 Recounts: Newspaper Report Activity Pack

    Twinkl Key Stage 1 - Year 1, Year 2 English Writing Non-Fiction Information Texts Newspapers. Help. This wonderful pack includes examples of newspaper articles with the main features of the genre missing for children to fill in, along with a handy checklist to help guide your children in their work.

  24. Spotify to Raise Prices Later This Year: Report

    The company, which is the world's largest paid streaming service by far, will increase prices by about $1 to $2 a month in five markets — including the U.K., Australia and Pakistan — by the ...

  25. Taiwan's strongest earthquake in 25 years kills 9 people, 50 missing

    Taiwan's biggest earthquake in at least 25 years killed nine people on Wednesday and injured more than 900, while 50 workers travelling in minibuses to a hotel in a national park were missing.

  26. Newspaper Report Example KS2

    Annotated versions of the newspaper report example (KS2) are included, which would be useful to show your learners once they've had a go at annotating the blank version themselves. The features annotated include genre features, as well as punctuation, grammar, and spelling. ... Twinkl added no year group 2 years ago; Twinkl updated the Main ...

  27. Dozens trapped in tunnels after Taiwan's strongest quake in 25 years

    Rescuers in Taiwan scrambled to free dozens of people trapped in highway tunnels after the island was struck by its strongest earthquake in 25 years Wednesday, killing at least nine and injuring ...

  28. Y2 Recounts: Newspaper Report Model/ Example Text

    5 tips for writing a good newspaper report. Compose a snappy headline that will grab the attention of readers. Include a byline e.g. Tom Smith, Sports Correspondent. Set the scene. Summarise your story in the 'lead' paragraph. Write the main body of your report. Speak concisely, including accurate quotes and references.

  29. The 10 Best MLB Trade Chips For 2024 Season

    Here are 10 names to know in looking ahead to the 2024 MLB summer trading season.

  30. Writing a newspaper report- KS2- Y3- English two week unit planning

    File previews. A pack of work for two weeks of English lessons building up to writing a newspaper report about a missing teddy kidnapped by pirates. The planning is based on the teaching sequence which follows the structure of: Immerse, Analyse, SPAG, Plan, Write, Review. The pack contains weekly planning, flipcharts and differentiated activities.