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    Guide to Coverage

    THERE’S MORE TO THE STORY

    A GUIDE TO COVERAGE THAT MAKES YOUR BOOK FRESH EACH YEAR.

    MORE LOCALIZED

    Tell the unique story of your school and the community. Be sure to include the topics that anchor you in your area and that show how and why you’re different than other schools in other towns in other parts of the country.

    MORE VOICES

    Give as many students as possible a chance to comment. Displays of quotes and longer first-person essays provide the opportunity for literally hundreds of students to be included in the book.

    MORE PERSONAL

    Find students with interesting tales of achievement, unusual experiences or typical life situations. Often a full spread, the key to strong profiles is a great interview, a compelling story, and exceptionally well-written copy.

    MORE ISSUES

    If it is important to your readers, put it in the book. Responsible coverage of issues includes research, balanced reporting and a local or humanized approach that ties the story to your school.

    FONT IDEAS

    Look for ideas that are different from what you have done in every other book and stretch your coverage by brainstorming harder at book planning time.

    MORE JUMPS

    Decide when it makes sense to have a topic expand onto a second or third spread and let the content dictate coverage. If the story is “bigger” than one spread, give it more than one spread.

    MORE SEGMENTS

    Who says that the sports section has to be all coverage of teams and their seasons? You might decide to add any number of new sports segments.

    MORE SECTIONS

    If it seems logical that an events or features section makes your story complete, include that section in your book. There’s no rule that says you must divide coverage into the same sections every year.

    MORE ANALYSIS

    If your theme or concept dictates some pattern other than standard sections, feel free to revise. Changing the number and order of sections in your book makes it new for the readers each year.

    MORE OPTIONS

    Modular design can help you make the most of secondary coverage. Create a library of possibilities that are visual, verbal, or both, and use them to cover each topic in the best way possible.

    MORE FUN

    Create the news that’s fit to print. Devise new opportunities for the students to be in the book and let them be a part of creating your coverage. They love it!!!

    Contributed by:
    Paul Ender
    Herff Jones Special Consultant
    Former JEA Yearbook Adviser of the Year

    Additional Resources

    Yearbook Questionnaire

    Getting feedback from the student body is a great way to gain students’ interest in buying a yearbook. Use this questionnaire, or develop your own, to gain useful information when planning your next yearbook.

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    50 Yearbook Survey Questions for Students

    We have provided some survey questions to ask high school students to inspire yearbook coverage ideas. Use these 50 top questions for surveys or as a jumping off point for yearbook interviews.

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    Dream Big

    Hear it from Ann – It’s always fun to study the new releases, noting what staffs are doing well and how trends are shifting. Whatever time I allot to reviewing books, I always wish I had more.

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