Difference between revisions 1533762 and 1534110 on enwikinews

{{DISPLAYTITLE:{{#if:{{#titleparts:{{FULLPAGENAME}}|-1}}|{{#titleparts:{{FULLPAGENAME}}|-1}}/|{{NAMESPACE}}:}}Pillars of ''Wikinews'' writing}}
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[[file:PurplePillar.svg|47px|alt=First pillar|]] Each article is a '''collaboration''' between a '''writer''' (or writers) and an independent '''reviewer''' (or reviewers).

: Articles aren't just "posted" on ''Wikinews''.  When you first create an article, there should be a template {{tl|develop}} at the top.  From then on, there will always be at least one template on the article saying where it is in our news production process.

: Writers compose an article, then submit it for review; and if review finds it not-ready for publication, writers may revise and resubmit.  Reviewers rigorously check the article; provide feedback to help writers both with the current article and with future articles; and, ultimately, judge whether the article as-yet meets all project criteria for publication.  Reviewers cannot make large changes to an article without disqualifying themselves from independent review.  Some articles never achieve publication, while others are published with high quality after multiple non-ready reviews.  Successful writer&ndash;reviewer collaboration is founded on the shared goal of quality ''Wikinews'' publication.

(contracted; show full)er to.  So you need to explain (succinctly if it's in the lede, yet more in the headline) things like what profession the person is in, what sport the teams plays, what country the city is in or team or person is from.  Don't assume the reader is already familiar with, say, a sensational criminal case, either; they can look up details later (hopefully, on ''Wikinews''&nbsp;:-), but tell them enough that they won't be confused now.

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