10 THINGS YOU
CAN START DOING NOW!
TO IMPROVE YOUR
WRITING
-
Strike at least one adjective and one adverb from one of your own scripts
before it goes on the air.
-
Read one book, either non-fiction or fiction, every other week. Focus not
only on what the author says, but on how the author says it.
-
Write one personal letter a week. It should be at least two pages long,
and it should describe something – a situation, a person, an incident,
or a spectacle.
-
Rewrite one of your own scripts at least once a week – preferably at a
low-stress time of the day. Concentrate on the changes you decide to make,
and figure out the reasons the rewrite reads better than the original.
-
Pick out one piece of good writing in your station’s newscast. Compliment
the person who wrote it.
-
Look up one word a day in the dictionary – something you heard someone
say, something you read and didn’t fully understand.
-
Find a word of several syllables in one of your scripts. Replace it with
a shorter word.
-
A passive voice sentence should be located. Make it active before the sentence
goes on the air!
-
Insert at least one "poetic device" – alliteration, assonance, metaphor,
or simile – into a story. Make it an original device, and not one "on loan"
from someone else.
-
Find one thing deserving of praise – a story, a sentence, a phrase, or
even a good effort – in your own work every day. Compliment yourself for
it.
© 1997 Thunder & Lightning News Service