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Quarter 1, Wk.1 - Module 1
Distinguishing Between and Among Informative,
Journalistic, and Literary Writing
Department of Education ● Republic of the Philippines
9
Printed in the Philippines by
Department of Education – Division of Iligan City
Office Address: General Aguinaldo, St., Iligan City
Telefax: (063)221-6069
E-mail Address: iligan.city@deped.gov.ph
English- Grade 9
Alternative Delivery Mode
Quarter 1,Wk.1 - Module 1: Distinguish Between and Among Informative,
Journalistic, and Literary Writing
First Edition, 2020
Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in anywork
of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency
or office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for
profit. Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment
of royalty.
Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in this book are owned by their respective copyright holders.
Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from
their respective copyright owners. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim
ownership over them.
Published by the Department of Education – Division of Cagayan de Oro
Schools Division Superintendent: Roy Angelo L. Gazo, PhD.,CESO V
Printed in the Philippines by
Department of Education – Division of Iligan City
Office Address: General Aguinaldo, St., Iligan City
Telefax: (063)221-6069
E-mail Address: iligan.city@deped.gov.ph
DEVELOPMENT TEAM OF THE MODULE
Writer/s: JEANNYLYN B. BONIEL
Content and Language Evaluators: FROILAN D. ESCALANTE, JEAN T. WALID
Design and Lay-out Evaluators: JOAN A. ENAD
Illustrator/Layout Artist: REZZEL MAE A. MONTECILLO
Management Team
Chairperson: Roy Angelo E. Gazo, PhD, CESO V
Schools Division Superintendent
Co-Chairpersons: Nimfa R. Lago, MSPh, PhD, CESE
Assistant Schools Division Superintendent
Members: Henry B. Abueva, EPS, OIC-CID Chief
Sherlita L. Daguisonan,LRMS Manager
John Ryan Dela Cruz – Division English Coordinator
Meriam S. Otarra, PDO II
Charlotte D. Quidlat, Librarian II
9
English
Quarter 1, Wk.1 - Module 1
Distinguishing Between and Among Informative,
Journalistic, and Literary Writing
Department of Education ● Republic of the Philippines
This instructional material was collaboratively developed and
reviewed by select teachers, school heads, Division English
Coordinator of the Department of Education - Division of Iligan City.
We encourage teachers and other education stakeholders to email
their feedback, comments, and recommendations to the Department
of Education-Iligan City Division at iligan.city@deped.gov.ph or
Telefax: (063)221-6069.
We value your feedback and recommendations.
Table of Contents
What This Module is About......................................................................................i
What I Need to Know ..............................................................................................ii
How to Learn from this Module...............................................................................ii
Icons of this Module ...............................................................................................iii
What I Know.......................................................................................................... iv
Lesson 1:
Distinguish Between and Among Informative, Journalistic, and Literary Writing ....1
What I Need to Know ........................................................................1
What’s In...........................................................................................2
What’s New.......................................................................................3
What Is It...........................................................................................7
What’s More......................................................................................12
What I Have Learned ........................................................................14
What I Can Do...................................................................................16
Summary… ............................................................................................................20
Assessment: (Post-Test)........................................................................................20
Key to Answers ...................................................................................................... 23
References............................................................................................................. 26
i
What Is This Module All About
Hello GRADE 9 it’s back to school once again! Department of Education is doing
its best to make learning easier and fun for all the learners. We are all back to study and
to learn in the New Normal way. Our goal is for you to learn safely at home. We knowall
of us are excited to continue learning and to go back to our classroom; but, we have to
find a way in order for you students to learn but not go to school physically. Through this
module, learners will still learn new lessons and topics. It is especially created andmade
for everyone to enjoy and learn. Lastly, this material focuses on the different text types
under writing and comprehension competency that will be of great advantage for you to
express yourself well.
The following are the standards for the first quarter. Read below to get yourself
directed for this quarter’s journey of learning.
CONTENT STANDARD: The learner demonstrates understanding of how Anglo-
American literature and other text types serve as means of enhancing the self; also, how
to use processing, assessing, summarizing information, word deviation and formation
strategies, appropriate word order, punctuation marks and interjections to enable him/her
to participate actively in a speech choir.
PERFORMANCE STANDARD: The learner actively participates in speech choir
through using effective verbal and non-verbal strategies based on the following criteria:
Focus, Delivery, Facial Expressions, Body Movements/Gestures and Audience Contact.
LEARNING COMPETENCY & CODE: At the end of this topic, 75% of the
learners are expected to distinguish between informative, journalistic and literary writing
(EN9WC-Ia-8).
This module focuses on distinguishing between and among in formative,
journalistic, and literary writing that will help you understand different text/writing types as
means of enhancing your writing skills. As you go through the module, you will find varied
tasks and writing activities.
ii
What I Need to Know
Below are the learning objectives that are set for you to learn as you go along
this module. You will be able to:
1. identify and distinguish between and among informative, journalistic, andliterary
writing and or text type use in the given sample of passages;
2. create/write a text type using piece of information of your choice using any of the
certain type of text;
3. compose any of the text /writing type; whether it is informative,journalistic,
literary.
How to Learn from this Module
To achieve the objectives cited above, you are to do the following:
• Take your time reading the lessons carefully.
• Follow the directions and/or instructions in the activities and exercises diligently.
• Answer all the given tests and exercises.
iii
Icons of this Module
What I Need to This part contains learning objectives that
Know are set for you to learn as you go along the
module.
What I know
This is an assessment as to your level of
knowledge to the subject matter at hand,
meant specifically to gauge prior related
Knowledge
What’s In This part connects previous lesson with that
of the current one.
What’s New An introduction of the new lesson through
various activities, before it will be presented
to you
What is It
These are discussions of the activities as a
way to deepen your discovery and under-
standing of the concept.
What’s More
These are follow-up activities that are
intended for you to practice further in order
to master the competencies.
What I Have
Learned
Activities designed to process what you
have learned from the lesson
What I can do
These are tasks that are designed to show-
case your skills and knowledge gained, and
applied into real-life concerns and situations.
iv
What I Know (Pretest)
Today, you will answer a pre- test to measure your previous knowledge about this topic.
Multiple Choice:
I. Multiple Choice: Read the statements carefully. Encircle the best answer.
1. It is a type of text which presents information that are found in radio, print or television.
A.informative B. literary C. journalistic
2. It gives readers straightforward information about a topic.
A. literary B. informative C. journalistic
3. It is a type of text which is usually non-fiction.
A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
1. It is written originally by a writer.
A. journalistic B. literary C. informative
2. It is a type of text which is defined as a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing.
A. literary B. journalistic C. informative
3. It serves to inform or discloses information.
A. journalistic B. informative C. literary
4. It is a type of text which leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritage of students.
A. literary B. journalistic C. informative
5. It is a type of writing which used to report news stories.
A. literary B. journalistic C. informative
6. It has a unique text type and construction level.
A. informative B. literary C. journalistic
7. It is a type of text in which the intention is to inform the reader about a specific topic.
A. literary B. informative C. journalistic
v
8. It is a type of text which is instructive and instructional by nature.
A. journalistic B. literary C. informative
9. It is a type of text which is written using special text features that allows the reader to
easily find key information and understand the main topic.
A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
10. It is a type of text which are found in online journalism.
A. literary B. informative C. journalistic
11. It involves finding, creating, editing and publishing of news to be shared.
A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
12. It is a type of text in which visual representation may include: charts, diagrams, and
tables and these are accompanied by captions that further explain the image.
A. informative B. literary C. journalistic
13. It gives interests to people who would like to be inform of something.
A. Journalistic B. literary C. informative
14. It imparts straight forward information and facts; but never personal opinions.
A. literary B. journalistic C. informative
15. It relates to, or have the characteristics of humane learning.
A. literary B. informative C. journalistic
16. It is a type of text that imparts knowledge to the readers.
A. journalisticB. literary C. informative
17. It is a type of text which has shorter texts like for example: personal essays, opinion
pieces, speeches and literature essay.
A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
vi
II. Identify the type of text use in the following articles such as: informative, journalistic or
literary. Encircle the letter of your answer.
Text A
1. A. informative B. literary C. journalistic
Text B
1. A. journalistic B. informative C. literary
Text C
2. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
They walked downtown in the light of mother-of-pearl, to the Majestic, and
their way to seats by the light of the screen, in the exhilarating smell of stale tobacco,
rank sweat, and dirty drawers, while the piano played fast music and galloping horses
raised a grandiose lag of dust.
A Death in the Family by James Agee
A fire of undetermined origin razed to the ground a three-story apartment of
Juana de la Cruz 456 Lapulapu St., Valencia City last night. Five fire companies
subdued it within an hour. The damage, estimated at P5 million, was covered by
insurance.
Toledo, Spain (Reuters) - Scientists believe they could discover life outside the
Solar System within the next 25 years covered by insurance. “Yes, definitely, there’s
life out there, “Mike Kaplan, director of US space agency NASA’s origins program,
told Reuters during a meeting of Astronomers in Toledo.
The Philippine Star, 15 March 1996
vii
Text D
3. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative
Text E
4. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative
Process Questions:
1. How did you find the pre-test?
2. What were the terms in the test that you were familiar? Cite some.
Scientific theories are not guesses or random ideas. A Scientific theory is a
collection of well-supported hypotheses based on repeated testing that explains
some aspect about the natural world.
It was dark and stormy. In her attic bedroom Margaret Murry, wrapped in an
old patchwork quilt, sat on the foot of her bed and watched the trees tossing in the
frenzied lashing of the wind.
1
Lesson
1
Distinguish Between and
Among Informative,
Journalistic and Literary
Writing
What I Need to Know
Below are the learning objectives that are set for you to learn as you go along the
module.
You will be able to:
1. distinguish between and among informative, journalistic and literary writing;
2. identify the type of text sample provided;
3. make a Community Service Brochure observing informative text
2
What’s In
Hello learners! This time you will learn a new lesson which will give you idea on
how to distinguish types of text writing. Before we will proceed deeper to understand
clearly what this topic is all about let us refresh our background knowledge on informative,
journalistic and literary writing.
TEXT
INFORMATIVE TEXT
JOURNALISTIC TEXT
LITERARY TEXT
A piece of writing that you read or create.
It serves to inform or discloses information. It is instructive and / or instructional. It is
literary non-fiction, which has shorter texts like for example personal essays, opinion
pieces, speeches, and literature essay. It is written using special text features that allow
the reader to easily find key information and understand the main topic.
It also presents information but are those that are found in radio, print, television and
online journalism. It is written originally by a writer or journalist with a unique style and
construction level. It’s main goal is to give informative articles to the readers. News and
information are example of journalistic text.
It is defined as a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing that leads to the
appreciation of the cultural heritages of students. It is something related or associated
with literature or scholarly learning and writing. It has a wide variety of imaginative and
creative writing that leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritage.
3
What’s New
Preliminary Activities:
Now that you are refreshed with the new words introduced to you, try to answer
the given activity attentively.
Activity 1 – Identify the Text
Look at the given sample texts, then identify/distinguish which text type are
examples of informative, journalistic, or literary. Then write your answer at the side of
each texts provided for your answer.
TEXT TYPE OF
TEXT
1.
So the thing to do when working on a motorcycle, as in any other
task, is to cultivate the peace of mind which does not separate
one’s self from one’s surroundings. When that is done
successfully then everything else follows naturally. Peace of
mind produces right values, right values produce right thoughts.
Right thoughts produce right actions and right actions produce
work which will be a material reflection for others to see of the
serenity at the center of it all.
—Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
2.
With an artistic drama, we empathize with one or more of its
characters, but there’s also a distance between us and their
situation—a safety valve that allows us to express a range of
emotions, but also to say, “It’s only a movie,” “It’s only a play,”
“It’s only a novel.” Work is based upon problem solving, how to
eliminate conflict and get the job done. Episodic is fine for work.
We want day-by-day not confrontational trauma—even if it would
lead to life-changing revelation. But drama exaggerates conflict,
pushes situations to their extreme, and leads us to a big turning
point.
3.
In a poem entitled Four Great Poets, Robert Francis puts his
finger on the heart of Frost’s greatness: “His head carved out of
granite O / His hair wayward drifts of snow / He worshipped the
great God of Flow / By holding on and letting go.” Here’s an
example from part of one of Frost’s lesser known pieces, For
Once, Then, Something. In the first half he says friends rebuke
him for looking into a well and seeing only himself, reflected in
the water godlike in a wreath of ferns and cloud puffs. It’s a
criticism that could be aimed at any writer, but what is as
interesting as the meaning of Frost’s reply is this sense of
movement that carries the reader forward to the climatic end.
http://lehmaninfo.wordpress.com/sample-business-literary-articles/
4
TEXT TYPE OF
TEXT
4.
DHAKA: Hosts Bangladesh will meet Pakistan in the opening
match of the four-nation Asia Cup cricket tournament starting in
Dhaka in March, an official said on Monday. Old rivals Pakistan
and India will meet in a mouth-watering clash on March 18. The
Sher-e-Bangla National stadium will host all the matches,
including the inaugural tie on March 12 and the final on March
22, Asian Cricket Council chief executive Syed Ashraful Huq
said. “All teams including India and Pakistan have confirmed
their participation,” he said. India won the last edition of the
tournament in Dambulla in Sri Lanka in June 2010.
http://www.paper-articles.com/
5.From Beowulf
And then, in the morning, crowds surrounded
Herot, warriors coming to that hall
520 From faraway lands, princes and leaders
Of men hurrying to behold the monster’s
Great staggering tracks. They gaped with no sense
Of sorrow, felt no regret for his suffering,
Went tracing his bloody footprints, his beaten
525 And lonely flight, to the edge of the lake
Where he’d dragged his corpse like way, doomed
And already weary of his vanishing life.
The water was bloody, steaming and boiling
In horrible pounding waves, heat
530 Sucked from his magic veins; but the swirling
Surf had covered his death, hidden
Deep in murky darkness his miserable
End, as hell opened to receive him.
Then old and young rejoiced, turned back
535 From that happy pilgrimage, mounted their
hardhooved
Horses, high-spirited stallions, and rode them
Slowly toward Heorot again, retelling
Beowulf’s bravery as they jogged along.
Activity 2 – Listening Attentively with Informative Text
Now that you have done your best in the first activity, let us proceed with the next activity.
Before you listen
(For those with the internet follow this site to listen to the informative text.)
1. Brainstorm on how to use attentive listening with informative text.
5
2. Concentrate on what the speaker is saying.
3. Clear their mind of any thoughts that could distract your attention.
4. Listen for main ideas, rather than isolated isolated words and phrases.
5. Stay alert for details that are new to you, while you take note of familiar information.
6. Ask questions that will clarify further what you are listening to.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yMzDEK2ZhjQ
Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=sample+of+stage+fright+pictures&safe=active&rlz=1
C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk01BdjbBbA9ncqwtQll4NSQdxxcDWQ:1592357573184
&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=2vW5Pp1jhWF6yM%253A%252CwejVGpFzHAOYgM%252C
_&vet=1&usg=AI4_kS5lt1Ca6e0aLfuAV6wgFUFz8Zs5w&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiX2ISc2ofqAhW
O-HMBHS7TBzAQ9QEwBHoECAoQDQ&biw=1366&bih=576#imgrc=2vW5Pp1jhWF6yM:
Look at the picture above. How would you describe the person? In what situation
do you think he is? Have you been in a similar situation? Our listening selection shows
you always to cope with such a situation.
As you Listen
Click on this link. https://youtu.be/yMzDEK2ZhjQ . Listen to an article on how to
conquer stage fright. Take down notes to answer the following questions:
1. What is stage fright?
2. What happens when a person experiences stage fright?
3. What are the tips given by the writer to overcome stage fright?
4. What are some suggestions just before a person goes on stage?
5. Why is stage fright considered normal?
6. Do you agree with the idea? Explain your answer
6
For those who do not have the internet, I want you to read the informative text.
Conquering Stage Fright
Many people are gifted with different talents but most of them are just a part of the
audience on certain occasions. Their stage fright is the very reason why some are not
stage performers. It is normal to experience stage fright according to stage performers.
Actors and actresses believe that you can overcome your stage fright. By changing
your perception about stage fright and by following basic tips, you can conquer it.
Try these tips to get you on stage without butterflies in your stomach.
Practice. Constant practice makes perfect. You have to trust yourself. Self-confidence
is the best way to control or overcome stage fright.
Talk to yourself. Instead of thinking that you will be forgetting some lines, or that you
will not be able to pronounce the words correctly, think that you will be delivering
flawlessly, that you have talents to show, and that people will appreciate your
extraordinary performance.
Visualize. Picture yourself on stage with so many people listening as you do your part
without committing a single mistake.
Practice with a small audience. After you have practiced your piece alone, you may
invite other family members or friends to listen as you rehearse. Or prior to inviting
other people, you may rehearse in front of a mirror for you to see the needed
improvements to your facial or body gestures.
Are you beginning to feel confident as the curtain is about to unfold? Are you
still nervous? If yes, don’t worry, that’s normal. Here are some suggestions to
overcome nervousness.
Yawn. Our body needs oxygen to keep our muscles relaxed. Yawning keeps our tight
muscles relaxed and breathing becomes shallow.
Stretch. Just like yawning, stretching also helps muscles relax. Do some simple
exercises like shaking your hands and feet, rotating your neck and your head, then
keep still until the spotlight hits you.
Focus on the first few lines of your piece. After you have delivered the first few
lines, you will notice that your nervousness is slightly disappearing.
Trust yourself. Keep telling yourself that you will not make the audience notice it.
After your successful performance, you will realize that you can overcomeyour
stage fright and face the even work to your advantage if you learn to overcome it. After
that flawless performance comes another until facing big audiences becomes fairly
easy.
After each performance and your audience is standing ovation acknowledging
your extraordinary performance, bow your head gently and be humble.
7
What’s Is It
Discussion
Informative Writing
Informative writing gives readers straightforward information about a topic. It is
usually non-fiction.
Purpose:
 to inform or present information
 to raise awareness and to do so objectively
 to educate (use resources that are reliable and scholarly)
Structure:
 Introduction paragraph with thesis statement
 Body paragraphs with support
 Conclusion with a unique and engaging restatement of thesis
Organization:
 Logically – by date or time; by order of importance
 Categorically – by definition; by theme
 Contextually – by comparison and contrast; by historical or contemporary
Types of Informative Writing
a Factual recount – a type of informative text that has an objective of retelling a true
event that happened in the past
b Procedural – a type of informative text that has procedures to do one thing
c Diary – a type of informative text that records the daily experiences of a person
Sample Informative Text
The most popular tourist attraction is the capital city Rome itself, with its rich
cultural heritage. The Colosseum, Castle Sant'Angelo, Fontana di Trevi, the Pantheon,
and the Vatican are some of the most visited sites in Rome. Venice is another city in Italy
that is famous for its beautiful canals and gondolas. And if you are a lover of Italian art,
the Uffizi Gallery in Florence is a place you cannot afford to miss. The city of Naples is
known around the world for its architectural beauty and surely it is a photographer's
delight. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, being on of the Seven Wonders of the World, attracts
the highest number of visitors, not only in Italy, but in the whole of Europe.
Source: https://penlighten.com/informative-essay-sample
8
It also gives you the opportunity to widen your business. Social Media is a great
and cheap way to tools.
Aside from that, it lets you meet people who can help you with your career. You
can find out what companies are hiring and hire people to hire for your company, you can
ask and get responds from your friends.
Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=sample+of+informative+text&safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enP
H861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk006EATHTTKdM-gfsj7yuGUFuLR-
4Q:1591398668399&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=yv81_iQNwJIanM%253A%252CfXrJTkIoGArvFM2
52C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_kQ6MRCcAkKunYhwURGfoZdWLyoVxQ&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjmm82C5uvpAhV
XZt4KHfFlCz8Q9QEwGXoECAoQRQ&biw=1211&bih=526#imgrc=esKBqSNqD97W3M&imgdii=Luj0Q2W
Ba7DVmM
Journalistic Writing
Journalistic writing is different from the other forms of literary texts. Unlike a
short story, poem, or novel, a journalistic text is more closely related to essay. News
reports, features, editorial, sports, and other columns in a newspaper or magazine are
considered journalistic texts.
Purpose:
 To quickly inform (news articles)
 To entertain (comics section, lifestyle column, feature)
 To persuade (editorial, opinion, column)
Structure:
 Inverted pyramid
9
Source: https://i2.wp.com/d1fcpxzix8mbyc.cloudfront.net/wp-
content/uploads/2016/03/inverted-pyramid.png?resize=1080%2C1250
Organization:
 The essential and most interesting elements of a story are put at the beginning,
with supporting information following in order of diminishing importance.
Types of Journalistic Text
Print journalism – type of journalism that focuses on print media, such as newspapers
and magazines
Broadcast journalism – type of journalism that is being broadcast, . radio and
television
Yellow journalism – type of journalism that uses exaggerating words or sensationalism;
uses eye-catching heading
10
Sample of Journalistic Writing
BAYOMBONG, NUEVA VIZCAYA—Vegetable farmers dumped tons of ripe tomatoes
on roadsides here and in nearby Ifugao province due to a glut in supply and low market
prices.
Small and medium-sized tomatoes were found abandoned along the roads in
Tinoc town in Ifugao on Tuesday, a week after tomatoes were also seen rotting on a
roadside in Bambang town in this province.
“The sorry sight of dumped tomatoes adds to the woes of farmers, who are
suffering from the impact of the quarantine,” Adrian Albano, administrator of Ifugao
Highland Farmers’ Forum, told the Inquirer by telephone on Thursday.
According to farmers, the low retail price of tomatoes would prevent them from
recovering their huge production expenses, as it would only cost them more to transport
the produce to buyers.
Source: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1287069/tomatoes-dumped-on-roadsides-in-nueva-vizcaya-ifugao#ixzz6OXT4S8BK
MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines’ confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-
19) cases surged to 20,626 as the Department of Health (DOH) reported Friday an
additional 244 cases.Meanwhile, 82 more patients have recovered from the respiratory
disease, bringing the total recoveries to 4,330.
The new reporting system has resulted in a massive surge in new COVID-19 cases
in recent days. But the DOH said the spike in cases does not mean that the outbreak is
getting worse as it attributed the increase to the government’s increased testing capacity
and “aggressive efforts” to catch up on the validation backlogs.
Earlier, COVID-19 Response Deputy Chief Implementer Vince Dizon said the government
is now eyeing to include asymptomatic patients in its “expanded targeted testing”
program.
This came as he reported that the country’s rated testing capacity increased to
nearly 42,000 a day.
However, the DOH earlier said that daily actual tests done by all the accredited
laboratories is only around 8,000 to 9,000 as some testing centers face operational
issues.There are currently 52 accredited laboratories nationwide, of which,
40 can use RT-PCR tests while the other 12 are testing centers licensed to use
GeneXpert rapid tests.
Source: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1286940/philippines-covid-19-cases-surge-to-20626-deaths-near-1000#ixzz6OXWOWfJO
Follow us: @inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook
Literary Writing
Literary writing may not be entirely factual or timely. It may also cover imaginary
events or ideas. It also tends to be subjective where the most important point may be
found anywhere in the text.
Purpose:
 To express
 To entertain
 To communicate or appeal to the emotions
11
Structure:
 Depends on the form
Organization:
 Logically – by date or time; by order of importance
 Categorically – by definition; by theme
 Contextually – by comparison and contrast; by historical or contemporary
Types of Literary Text
a Prose
a Poetry
Sample of Literary Writing
It was a dark and stormy night.
In her attic bedroom Margaret Murry,
Wrapped in an old patchwork quilt,
Sat on the foot of her bed and
watched the trees tossing in the
frenzied lashing of the wind.
Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=example+of+literary+writing&safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enP
H861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk00jmxfiDMwfa2aEagyeKIyczaBHg:1591402797085&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx
=1&fir=gRn3g1UP-czbWM%253A%252CHSPNUUQlS5HexM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_-
kSGpZ4XT5tyql2c5adcStVv_I5z0w&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjzq6iz9evpAhXOa94KHbL5DZ0Q9QEwBXoEC
AoQHw&biw=1211&bih=477#imgrc=gRn3g1UP-czbWM:
12
Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=example+of+literary+writing&safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk
00jmxfiDMwfa2aEagyeKIyczaBHg:1591402797085&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=gRn3g1UP-
czbWM%253A%252CHSPNUUQlS5HexM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_-
kSGpZ4XT5tyql2c5adcStVv_I5z0w&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjzq6iz9evpAhXOa94KHbL5DZ0Q9QEwBXoECAoQHw&biw=1211&bih=4
77#imgrc=gRn3g1UP-czbWM&imgdii=cCas5cph8zzknM
What’s More
Activity 3: Think it through:
To further enhance your knowledge on distinguishing the types of writing, Kindly read
carefully the given items then check the column where it belongs.
Items Given Informative Journalistic Literary
1. Novel
2. Factual recount
3. Sports news
4. Editorial column
5. A recipe for carbonara
6. Movie review
7. A social etiquette article
8. A brochure on the detecting signs of drug abuse
13
9. Poem on entitled: Why Do I Love Thee
10. 10 Signs of Covid 19 as Lead news
11. Magazine
12. The play entitled: “Romeo and Juliet”
13. How to Cook Paella
14. The Legend of Maria Cristina Falls
15. Pres. Duterte may align Funds vs. Covid 19,
says Driton
Activity 4: Show your Writing Talent
A. Informative Writing.
After going through the activities, you are now very familiar on distinguishing the
three (3) Types of Text. Choose one (1) of the following themes. Write your own
informative article.
 Friendship
 Love
 Courage
 Loyalty
B. Journalistic Writing.
1. Read an article/story from a newspaper. Cut it then, paste it on a short coupon
bond. Take note on the following key points.
2. Write a short news article on another short coupon bond.
 What is the story about?
 Are there words you do not understand?
 Give me an example of formal language used in the text?
 Write/pick out the five (5) W’sof the article (who, what, where, when, why). Write
down your answer at the bottom of your paper.
C. Literary Writing.
I want you to write one a short poem (1) as your example of literary writing base
on what you have learned from the module.
14
What I Have Learned
From the examples given, fill out the table below:
Informative vs. Journalistic vs. Literary Writing
Activity 4 A. Fill the table with the needed information
ELEMENT/FEATURE INFORMATIVE JOURNALISTIC LITERARY
Purpose
Manner of reading (formal,
informal,
entertaining/dramatic)
Format (where do you find
the text?)
Other Features
B. How Well Do You Know?
Directions: Identify whether the statement described is informative, journalistic or
literary writing.
1.It uses a wide variety of imaginative and
creative writing that leads to the appreciation of
a variety of subjects.
2.It is the style of writing used to report news
stories in newspapers, television broadcasts,
on radio and on the Internet.
3.These are texts which intend to inform the
reader or viewer. They use facts to describe
and explain people, animals, objects, events,
or phenomena.
15
4.It is a piece of written material, such as a book
or poem, that has the purpose of telling a story
or entertaining, as in a fictional novel. Its
primary function as a text is usually aesthetic,
but it may also contain political messages or
beliefs.
5.The purpose of this text is to educate and
enlighten the reader. It is a very
straightforward piece of writing.
C. After going through our lesson, let's fill in the triple Venn diagram shown below.
In each circle, enumerate the individual and unique features of informative, journalistic
and literary writing. However, on the overlapping parts of the circles, identify common
features shared between these types of discourse.
Making Connections to Your Schema
Journalistic Writing
Literary Writing
Informative Writing
16
What Can I do
Enrichment Activity Activity 8 Community Services Brochure
The Community Services Brochure is your major output for this lesson. This
brochure specifically informs the public of the services available in your community. As
a form of informative writing, the brochure should present factual information and details
about any club, center or key persons offering services in your barangay/community
which you would like to feature. Other forms of informative writing include letters, reports,
speeches, review and instruction pamphlet.
The criteria for assessment will be: Focus, Content, Organization, Supports,
Visuals, Clarity and Language Mechanics. Here are some ideas which might help you in
the preparation and presentation of a Community Services Brochure. Keep these points
in mind as you go through the process.
Planning Stage
Think of a plan for the preparation of your brochure in which you can communicate
with your barangay but still following the social distancing technique where the following
points should be covered:
 You should create the simplest but presentable community services brochure you can do
but sill have all the essentials that a brochure should have e.g. pictures you can make
use, how to layout your brochure, what are the services in your barangay that you will
feature that you want other people to know etc.
 Identify the topic of your brochure.
 Clarify the main requirements of the brochure which are the topic, purpose, and audience.
 Clarify the purpose of the brochure. Answer these questions: Who will be interested to
read the brochure? Who needs it?
 Identify the key persons whom you will contact in the barangay, clubs or services that will
be highlighted in your brochure.
17
Gathering Information
Before you gather information, be sure that you have secured a permission to
conduct an interview with the key persons, services or club you planned to feature.
 Look for the key persons in the barangay you can make contact with, clubs, or centers,
that offer services that make a difference.
 Prepare questions (interview schedule) and put them in a logical order.
 Call or visit and interview at least three (3) people to learn more about their services.
 Make a list of their accomplishments/achievements and specialization.
 Find out what they consider important to their success.
 Collect photos, drawings, illustrations, or videos (if possible) showing ordinary people
making a difference by performing their roles in life willingly and graciously.
Drafting
 Consolidate the information you have gathered, and choose what will be used in your
brochure.
 Use few, simple, short, catchy but meaningful sentences and captions
 Think of the order you will use to organize the factual information.
 Point out the help, support, and benefits the club, or key persons receive as well as the
specialization or services they offer.
 Explain the significance of the services to the target readers.
 Through speaking and writing, report the services and needs of the clubs or
organizations.
 Use photos and charts in the presentation.
Writing and Presenting
 Ask your teachers to read and evaluate your brochure
 Ask for comments and suggestions
 Look over the first draft and rewrite it.
 Polish your draft incorporating the suggestions made by your evaluators
 Do the finishing touches and present your Community Services Brochure.
18
RUBRIC FOR COMMUNITY SERVICES BROCURE
Criteria Expert
5
Proficient
4
Developing
3
Basic
2
Beginning
1
Focus Information
included are
relevantto the
objectives of
the brochure
Most of the
information are
relevant except for
one or two
Some of the
information are
relevant but with
noticeable
irrelevant
information
Too many
irrelevant
included in
the
brochure
No relevant
information
can be
gleaned
from the
brochure
Content Has all the
required
information(s
ee checklist)
and some
additional
information
Has all the required
information(see
checklist)
Has most of the
required information
Has little of
the required
information
Organization Information is
well-
organized and
coherent
Information is well-
organized and
coherent except 1
Information is
coherent but not
very organized
Information
is confusing
to the
reader
Support Well-
supported
headings/sub-
headings and
more
Most of the
headings/topics are
well-supported
Lacking
support
Visuals Graphics go
well with the
text.
There is good
mix of text and
graphics
The graphics go
well with the textbut
there are too many
that they distract
from the text
Graphics go well
with text but there
are too few
Graphics
do not go
well with
the text and
appear to
be
randomly
chosen
Graphics
included
are merely
filters
Attractivene
ss (Layout)
Has
exceptionally
attractive
formatting
Acceptable but
could not havedone
better
Either too
garish or
too bland
Clarity Purpose of
brochure is
clear to the
reader
Purpose is
somewhat clear
Purpose for
making
brochure is
not clear to
the reader
19
Criteria Expert
5
Proficient
4
Developing
3
Basic
2
Beginning
1
Language
Mechanics
(Writing
conventions)
Writing done
in complete
sentences
Capitalization
& punctuation
are correct
throughout
the brochure
4-5 errors in
grammar,
capitalization &
punctuation
6-7 errors in
grammar,
capitalization &
punctuation
8-10 errors
in grammar,
capitalizatio
n &
punctuation
10 or more
errors in
grammar,
capitalizatio
n &
punctuation
Copies for
organization
Gave >20
copies
Gave 15-19 copies Gave 10-14 copies Gave > 10
copies
No copies
Posted
online
Posted online
with less than
5 suggestion
Posted online with
6-10
suggestions/reactio
ns for improvement
Posted online with
11-15
suggestions/reactio
ns for improvement
Timeliness Submitted at
least 2 days
before
deadline
Submitted a day
before deadline
date
Submitted on
deadline date
Submitted
one (1) day
after
deadline
date
Submitted
2-4 days
after
deadline
date
*Points will be forfeited if work is submitted more than 5 days after deadline date
Content Checklist:
 Contact information: This often ends up being the flap or the back of the brochure;
should contain all the ways your clubs or organization can be contacted (names,
addresses, phone number, email, web address)
 Mailing addresses: One of the outside panels of your brochure should have a return
address for your organization and a blank area where you can stick a mailing label or
write and address. Saves you the cost of envelopes!
 Front cover. This should contain your name, logo, and slogan, but not much more.
Keep it from getting too crowded and chaotic,but try to make the reader
interested in opening the brochure up and reading on.
 Features/benefits: This is usually the inside of the brochure. This part of
your brochure should tell a bit about what your program does and what the
benefits are to those who become involved.
 Action: What can the reader do? This could focus on how the volunteer can pitch in
and help the group or coalition, or it could focus on how the volunteer can benefit from
the services him/herself. You can include both, if you’d like.
 Elsewhere, if desired, a brief history of the organization, directions on how to access
or use services provided, how the organization is funded, or information on thestaff.
20
Summary
The learners will make personal connections by using their schema (background
knowledge) in distinguishing between and among the types of text introduce and
provided for them in this module. The learners will also be guided to apply what they have
learned from this module in which they will make use of their daily life outside the four (4)
walls of the classroom.
Assessment: (Post-Test)
I. Multiple Choice: Read the statements carefully. Encircle the best answer.
1It is a type of text which presents information that are found in radio, print or television.
A.informative B. literary C. journalistic
2.It gives readers straightforward information about a topic.
A. literary B. informative C. journalistic
3. It is a type of text which is usually non-fiction.
A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
4.It is written originally by a writer.
A. journalistic B. literary C. informative
5.It is a type of text which is defined as a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing.
B. literary B. journalistic C. informative
6.It serves to inform or discloses information.
B. journalistic B. informative C. literary
7.It is a type of text which leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritage of students.
B. literary B. journalistic C. informative
8.It is a type of writing which used to report news stories.
B. literary B. journalistic C. informative
9.It has a unique text type and construction level.
B. informative B. literary C. journalistic
21
10. It is a type of text in which the intention is to inform the reader about a specific topic.
B. literary B. informative C. journalistic
11. It is a type of text which is instructive and instructional by nature.
B. journalistic B. literary C. informative
12. It is a type of text which is written using special text features that allows the reader to
easily find key information and understand the main topic.
B. informative B. journalistic C. literary
13.It is a type of text which are found in online journalism.
B. literary B. informative C. journalistic
14. It involves finding, creating, editing and publishing of news to be shared.
B. informative B. journalistic C. literary
15. It is a type of text in which visual representation may include: charts, diagrams, and
tables and these are accompanied by captions that further explain the image.
B. informative B. literary C. journalistic
16. It gives interests to people who would like to be inform of something.
B. Journalistic B. literary C. informative
17. It imparts straight forward information and facts; but never personal opinions.
B. literary B. journalistic C. informative
18.It relates to, or have the characteristics of humane learning.
B. literary B. informative C. journalistic
19.It is a type of text that imparts knowledge to the readers.
B. journalisticB. literary C. informative
20.It is a type of text which has shorter texts like for example: personal essays, opinion
pieces, speeches and literature essay.
B. informative B. journalistic C. literary
22
II. Learner will identify the type of text use in the following articles such as:informative,
journalistic or literary. Encircle the letter of your answer.
Text A
1. A. informative B. literary C. journalistic
Text B
2. A. journalistic B. informative C. literary
Text C
3. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
Text D
4. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative
Text E
5. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative
They walked downtown in the light of mother-of-pearl, to the Majestic, and their
way to seats by the light of the screen, in the exhilarating smell of stale tobacco, rank
sweat, and dirty drawers, while the piano played fast music and galloping horses raised
a grandiose lag of dust. A Death in the Family by James Agee
A fire of undetermined origin razed to the ground a three-story apartment of Juana
de la Cruz 456 Lapulapu St., Valencia City last night. Five fire companies subdued it
within an hour. The damage, estimated at P5 million, was covered by insurance.
Toledo, Spain (Reuters) - Scientists believe they could discover life outside the
Solar System within the next 25 years covered by insurance. “Yes, definitely, there’s
life out there, “Mike Kaplan, director of US space agency NASA’s origins program, told
Reuters during a meeting of Astronomers in Toledo.
The Philippine Star, 15 March 1996
Scientific theories are not guesses or random ideas. A Scientific theory is a collection
of well-supported hypotheses based on repeated testing that explains some aspect
about the natural world.
It was dark and stormy. In her attic bedroom Margaret Murry, wrapped in an old
patchwork quilt, sat on the foot of her bed and watched the trees tossing in the frenzied
lashing of the wind.
23
Activity 7
Element/Feature INFORMATIVE JOURNALISTIC LITERARY
Purpose
* To inform the reader about
the natural or social world
* It conveys information
accurately.
* it increase knowledge,
explain a procedure, or explore
a concept in depth
* informs the public by
reporting on local, national
and global news and events
* journalists strive to write
articles that have wide
appeal and can be easily
understand
* it is a piece of writing, such
as a book, poem, etc.
Manner of Reading
(formal, informal,
entertaining/dramatic)
* uses a variety of sentence
structure to help the reader
from getting bored, and ideas
are organized in a way that
makes sense
* each body paragraph
should focus on explaining a
single idea that was introduced
in the thesis statement and
develops the topic in a logical
order
* Journalism is about
telling people what they
didn’t know,
* makes the reader want to
about it more
* reading literary writing
like novels, poems is
different from reading
magazines and news
stories
* readers get immersed in
reading stories and want to
get to know the characters
and wonder about the
outcome
24
Format
(where do you find the
text)
* the basic structure of
informative essay is very
simple
* it needs to have beginning,
middle and end.
* formal by nature that follows
the introduction, body, and
conclusion respectively
* follows the 5W’s (who,
what, where, when, why)
question in order for it to
report a news stories
* follows the introduction,
body and conclusion which is
the basic structure to
maintain in most formats of
academic writing when it
comes to reading stories
* has literary element that
describes the ways the
author uses words- word
choice, sentence
structure, figurative
language and sentence
arrangement all work together
to establish mood, images,
and meaning in the text.
Other Features Structure:
* clear opening
* general information about
the topic
* summarizing conclusion
* interesting, easy to read the
layout
Language
* present tense
* first person or third person
(depends on topic
-can be personal)
* connectives to make it clear
and coherent
* mostly facts (but can contain
opinion if its a personal text)
* rhetorical questions to
engage reader’s interest
* specific examples
* bullet point summarizes may
be appropriate/help
* a style of writing that is
used to report news stories
in a variety of media
formats
* obvious characteristics of
the style include short,
simple sentences and
paragraphs that present
objective stories based on
facts
* journalists use quotes to
give the story credibility
* usually fictional, and it
makes use of figurative
symbolic language
* usually fiction that
displays a sense or reality
* tension or conflict
* artistic unity ( main idea is
conveyed)
* use figurative language (
simile, metaphor, irony,
symbolism, etc.)
25
References ( print and non-print)
Campomanes, IPJ. (2017). “Module 1, Lesson 1: Enhancing the Self.” A Simplified
Learning Module for English Grade 9 BEC K-12/Open High School Program
(OHSP). A learning material submitted to the Division of Valencia City, pp. 48-50.
Lapid, M.G.; Serrano, J.B.(2018). English Communication Arts and Skills through Anglo-
American and Philippine Literature, English 9 (Eight Edition). Quezon City: Phoenix
Publishing House, Inc., pp. 106-108.
Natividad, V. R. (2017). English in Perspective Anglo-American Literature,English 9
Second Edition). Quezon City: Abiva Publishing House, Inc., pp. 116-117.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCmzoYxl9LA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKKDH2whXzw
http://www.wams.org/characteristics-of-a-literary-text/
https://www.google.com/search?q=sample+of+text+type&rlz=1C1CHBF_enPH861PH86
2&oq=sample+of+text+type&aqs=chrome..0j69i57j0l6.9653j0j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=U
TF-8
https://www.google.com/search?safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&sxsrf=AL
eKk00g2zGOZAynUiX7-
9I3QzQ3gOymqQ%3A1591520746848&ei=6q3cXtCjM5CsoASGgLvQAg&q=sample+of
+informative+text&oq=sample+of+informative&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQARgAMgQIIxAn
MgIIADICCAAyAggAMgIIADICCAAyAggAMgIIADICCAAyAggAOgQIABBHOgYIABAW
EB46BQgAEJECOgUIABCxAzoHCAAQFBCHAlD40QtYlZEMYKKhDGgAcAF4AIABwg
GIAYQYkgEEMC4yMJgBAKABAaoBB2d3cy13aXo&sclient=psy-ab
http://static1.squarespace.com/static/53e7dd4fe4b0fb1fc62c318a/t/56a253caab2810f33
9a7ca59/1453478859875/writing_features.pdf
https://www.google.com/search?q=what+are+the+features+of+journalistic+writing&rlz=1
C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&oq=what+are+the+features&aqs=chrome.0.0j69i57j0l6.243
23j0j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
For inquiries and feedback, please write or call:
Department of Education – Division of Iligan City
Office Address: General Aguinaldo, St., Iligan City
Telefax: (063)221-6069
E-mail Address: iligan.city@deped.gov.ph

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English9 q1 mod1_w1_distinguish-between-and-among-informative-journalistic-and-literary-writing_v3-converted (1)

  • 1. English Quarter 1, Wk.1 - Module 1 Distinguishing Between and Among Informative, Journalistic, and Literary Writing Department of Education ● Republic of the Philippines 9
  • 2. Printed in the Philippines by Department of Education – Division of Iligan City Office Address: General Aguinaldo, St., Iligan City Telefax: (063)221-6069 E-mail Address: iligan.city@deped.gov.ph English- Grade 9 Alternative Delivery Mode Quarter 1,Wk.1 - Module 1: Distinguish Between and Among Informative, Journalistic, and Literary Writing First Edition, 2020 Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in anywork of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit. Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of royalty. Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names, trademarks, etc.) included in this book are owned by their respective copyright holders. Every effort has been exerted to locate and seek permission to use these materials from their respective copyright owners. The publisher and authors do not represent nor claim ownership over them. Published by the Department of Education – Division of Cagayan de Oro Schools Division Superintendent: Roy Angelo L. Gazo, PhD.,CESO V Printed in the Philippines by Department of Education – Division of Iligan City Office Address: General Aguinaldo, St., Iligan City Telefax: (063)221-6069 E-mail Address: iligan.city@deped.gov.ph DEVELOPMENT TEAM OF THE MODULE Writer/s: JEANNYLYN B. BONIEL Content and Language Evaluators: FROILAN D. ESCALANTE, JEAN T. WALID Design and Lay-out Evaluators: JOAN A. ENAD Illustrator/Layout Artist: REZZEL MAE A. MONTECILLO Management Team Chairperson: Roy Angelo E. Gazo, PhD, CESO V Schools Division Superintendent Co-Chairpersons: Nimfa R. Lago, MSPh, PhD, CESE Assistant Schools Division Superintendent Members: Henry B. Abueva, EPS, OIC-CID Chief Sherlita L. Daguisonan,LRMS Manager John Ryan Dela Cruz – Division English Coordinator Meriam S. Otarra, PDO II Charlotte D. Quidlat, Librarian II
  • 3. 9 English Quarter 1, Wk.1 - Module 1 Distinguishing Between and Among Informative, Journalistic, and Literary Writing Department of Education ● Republic of the Philippines This instructional material was collaboratively developed and reviewed by select teachers, school heads, Division English Coordinator of the Department of Education - Division of Iligan City. We encourage teachers and other education stakeholders to email their feedback, comments, and recommendations to the Department of Education-Iligan City Division at iligan.city@deped.gov.ph or Telefax: (063)221-6069. We value your feedback and recommendations.
  • 4. Table of Contents What This Module is About......................................................................................i What I Need to Know ..............................................................................................ii How to Learn from this Module...............................................................................ii Icons of this Module ...............................................................................................iii What I Know.......................................................................................................... iv Lesson 1: Distinguish Between and Among Informative, Journalistic, and Literary Writing ....1 What I Need to Know ........................................................................1 What’s In...........................................................................................2 What’s New.......................................................................................3 What Is It...........................................................................................7 What’s More......................................................................................12 What I Have Learned ........................................................................14 What I Can Do...................................................................................16 Summary… ............................................................................................................20 Assessment: (Post-Test)........................................................................................20 Key to Answers ...................................................................................................... 23 References............................................................................................................. 26
  • 5. i What Is This Module All About Hello GRADE 9 it’s back to school once again! Department of Education is doing its best to make learning easier and fun for all the learners. We are all back to study and to learn in the New Normal way. Our goal is for you to learn safely at home. We knowall of us are excited to continue learning and to go back to our classroom; but, we have to find a way in order for you students to learn but not go to school physically. Through this module, learners will still learn new lessons and topics. It is especially created andmade for everyone to enjoy and learn. Lastly, this material focuses on the different text types under writing and comprehension competency that will be of great advantage for you to express yourself well. The following are the standards for the first quarter. Read below to get yourself directed for this quarter’s journey of learning. CONTENT STANDARD: The learner demonstrates understanding of how Anglo- American literature and other text types serve as means of enhancing the self; also, how to use processing, assessing, summarizing information, word deviation and formation strategies, appropriate word order, punctuation marks and interjections to enable him/her to participate actively in a speech choir. PERFORMANCE STANDARD: The learner actively participates in speech choir through using effective verbal and non-verbal strategies based on the following criteria: Focus, Delivery, Facial Expressions, Body Movements/Gestures and Audience Contact. LEARNING COMPETENCY & CODE: At the end of this topic, 75% of the learners are expected to distinguish between informative, journalistic and literary writing (EN9WC-Ia-8). This module focuses on distinguishing between and among in formative, journalistic, and literary writing that will help you understand different text/writing types as means of enhancing your writing skills. As you go through the module, you will find varied tasks and writing activities.
  • 6. ii What I Need to Know Below are the learning objectives that are set for you to learn as you go along this module. You will be able to: 1. identify and distinguish between and among informative, journalistic, andliterary writing and or text type use in the given sample of passages; 2. create/write a text type using piece of information of your choice using any of the certain type of text; 3. compose any of the text /writing type; whether it is informative,journalistic, literary. How to Learn from this Module To achieve the objectives cited above, you are to do the following: • Take your time reading the lessons carefully. • Follow the directions and/or instructions in the activities and exercises diligently. • Answer all the given tests and exercises.
  • 7. iii Icons of this Module What I Need to This part contains learning objectives that Know are set for you to learn as you go along the module. What I know This is an assessment as to your level of knowledge to the subject matter at hand, meant specifically to gauge prior related Knowledge What’s In This part connects previous lesson with that of the current one. What’s New An introduction of the new lesson through various activities, before it will be presented to you What is It These are discussions of the activities as a way to deepen your discovery and under- standing of the concept. What’s More These are follow-up activities that are intended for you to practice further in order to master the competencies. What I Have Learned Activities designed to process what you have learned from the lesson What I can do These are tasks that are designed to show- case your skills and knowledge gained, and applied into real-life concerns and situations.
  • 8. iv What I Know (Pretest) Today, you will answer a pre- test to measure your previous knowledge about this topic. Multiple Choice: I. Multiple Choice: Read the statements carefully. Encircle the best answer. 1. It is a type of text which presents information that are found in radio, print or television. A.informative B. literary C. journalistic 2. It gives readers straightforward information about a topic. A. literary B. informative C. journalistic 3. It is a type of text which is usually non-fiction. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary 1. It is written originally by a writer. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative 2. It is a type of text which is defined as a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative 3. It serves to inform or discloses information. A. journalistic B. informative C. literary 4. It is a type of text which leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritage of students. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative 5. It is a type of writing which used to report news stories. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative 6. It has a unique text type and construction level. A. informative B. literary C. journalistic 7. It is a type of text in which the intention is to inform the reader about a specific topic. A. literary B. informative C. journalistic
  • 9. v 8. It is a type of text which is instructive and instructional by nature. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative 9. It is a type of text which is written using special text features that allows the reader to easily find key information and understand the main topic. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary 10. It is a type of text which are found in online journalism. A. literary B. informative C. journalistic 11. It involves finding, creating, editing and publishing of news to be shared. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary 12. It is a type of text in which visual representation may include: charts, diagrams, and tables and these are accompanied by captions that further explain the image. A. informative B. literary C. journalistic 13. It gives interests to people who would like to be inform of something. A. Journalistic B. literary C. informative 14. It imparts straight forward information and facts; but never personal opinions. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative 15. It relates to, or have the characteristics of humane learning. A. literary B. informative C. journalistic 16. It is a type of text that imparts knowledge to the readers. A. journalisticB. literary C. informative 17. It is a type of text which has shorter texts like for example: personal essays, opinion pieces, speeches and literature essay. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary
  • 10. vi II. Identify the type of text use in the following articles such as: informative, journalistic or literary. Encircle the letter of your answer. Text A 1. A. informative B. literary C. journalistic Text B 1. A. journalistic B. informative C. literary Text C 2. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary They walked downtown in the light of mother-of-pearl, to the Majestic, and their way to seats by the light of the screen, in the exhilarating smell of stale tobacco, rank sweat, and dirty drawers, while the piano played fast music and galloping horses raised a grandiose lag of dust. A Death in the Family by James Agee A fire of undetermined origin razed to the ground a three-story apartment of Juana de la Cruz 456 Lapulapu St., Valencia City last night. Five fire companies subdued it within an hour. The damage, estimated at P5 million, was covered by insurance. Toledo, Spain (Reuters) - Scientists believe they could discover life outside the Solar System within the next 25 years covered by insurance. “Yes, definitely, there’s life out there, “Mike Kaplan, director of US space agency NASA’s origins program, told Reuters during a meeting of Astronomers in Toledo. The Philippine Star, 15 March 1996
  • 11. vii Text D 3. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative Text E 4. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative Process Questions: 1. How did you find the pre-test? 2. What were the terms in the test that you were familiar? Cite some. Scientific theories are not guesses or random ideas. A Scientific theory is a collection of well-supported hypotheses based on repeated testing that explains some aspect about the natural world. It was dark and stormy. In her attic bedroom Margaret Murry, wrapped in an old patchwork quilt, sat on the foot of her bed and watched the trees tossing in the frenzied lashing of the wind.
  • 12. 1 Lesson 1 Distinguish Between and Among Informative, Journalistic and Literary Writing What I Need to Know Below are the learning objectives that are set for you to learn as you go along the module. You will be able to: 1. distinguish between and among informative, journalistic and literary writing; 2. identify the type of text sample provided; 3. make a Community Service Brochure observing informative text
  • 13. 2 What’s In Hello learners! This time you will learn a new lesson which will give you idea on how to distinguish types of text writing. Before we will proceed deeper to understand clearly what this topic is all about let us refresh our background knowledge on informative, journalistic and literary writing. TEXT INFORMATIVE TEXT JOURNALISTIC TEXT LITERARY TEXT A piece of writing that you read or create. It serves to inform or discloses information. It is instructive and / or instructional. It is literary non-fiction, which has shorter texts like for example personal essays, opinion pieces, speeches, and literature essay. It is written using special text features that allow the reader to easily find key information and understand the main topic. It also presents information but are those that are found in radio, print, television and online journalism. It is written originally by a writer or journalist with a unique style and construction level. It’s main goal is to give informative articles to the readers. News and information are example of journalistic text. It is defined as a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing that leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritages of students. It is something related or associated with literature or scholarly learning and writing. It has a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing that leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritage.
  • 14. 3 What’s New Preliminary Activities: Now that you are refreshed with the new words introduced to you, try to answer the given activity attentively. Activity 1 – Identify the Text Look at the given sample texts, then identify/distinguish which text type are examples of informative, journalistic, or literary. Then write your answer at the side of each texts provided for your answer. TEXT TYPE OF TEXT 1. So the thing to do when working on a motorcycle, as in any other task, is to cultivate the peace of mind which does not separate one’s self from one’s surroundings. When that is done successfully then everything else follows naturally. Peace of mind produces right values, right values produce right thoughts. Right thoughts produce right actions and right actions produce work which will be a material reflection for others to see of the serenity at the center of it all. —Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance 2. With an artistic drama, we empathize with one or more of its characters, but there’s also a distance between us and their situation—a safety valve that allows us to express a range of emotions, but also to say, “It’s only a movie,” “It’s only a play,” “It’s only a novel.” Work is based upon problem solving, how to eliminate conflict and get the job done. Episodic is fine for work. We want day-by-day not confrontational trauma—even if it would lead to life-changing revelation. But drama exaggerates conflict, pushes situations to their extreme, and leads us to a big turning point. 3. In a poem entitled Four Great Poets, Robert Francis puts his finger on the heart of Frost’s greatness: “His head carved out of granite O / His hair wayward drifts of snow / He worshipped the great God of Flow / By holding on and letting go.” Here’s an example from part of one of Frost’s lesser known pieces, For Once, Then, Something. In the first half he says friends rebuke him for looking into a well and seeing only himself, reflected in the water godlike in a wreath of ferns and cloud puffs. It’s a criticism that could be aimed at any writer, but what is as interesting as the meaning of Frost’s reply is this sense of movement that carries the reader forward to the climatic end. http://lehmaninfo.wordpress.com/sample-business-literary-articles/
  • 15. 4 TEXT TYPE OF TEXT 4. DHAKA: Hosts Bangladesh will meet Pakistan in the opening match of the four-nation Asia Cup cricket tournament starting in Dhaka in March, an official said on Monday. Old rivals Pakistan and India will meet in a mouth-watering clash on March 18. The Sher-e-Bangla National stadium will host all the matches, including the inaugural tie on March 12 and the final on March 22, Asian Cricket Council chief executive Syed Ashraful Huq said. “All teams including India and Pakistan have confirmed their participation,” he said. India won the last edition of the tournament in Dambulla in Sri Lanka in June 2010. http://www.paper-articles.com/ 5.From Beowulf And then, in the morning, crowds surrounded Herot, warriors coming to that hall 520 From faraway lands, princes and leaders Of men hurrying to behold the monster’s Great staggering tracks. They gaped with no sense Of sorrow, felt no regret for his suffering, Went tracing his bloody footprints, his beaten 525 And lonely flight, to the edge of the lake Where he’d dragged his corpse like way, doomed And already weary of his vanishing life. The water was bloody, steaming and boiling In horrible pounding waves, heat 530 Sucked from his magic veins; but the swirling Surf had covered his death, hidden Deep in murky darkness his miserable End, as hell opened to receive him. Then old and young rejoiced, turned back 535 From that happy pilgrimage, mounted their hardhooved Horses, high-spirited stallions, and rode them Slowly toward Heorot again, retelling Beowulf’s bravery as they jogged along. Activity 2 – Listening Attentively with Informative Text Now that you have done your best in the first activity, let us proceed with the next activity. Before you listen (For those with the internet follow this site to listen to the informative text.) 1. Brainstorm on how to use attentive listening with informative text.
  • 16. 5 2. Concentrate on what the speaker is saying. 3. Clear their mind of any thoughts that could distract your attention. 4. Listen for main ideas, rather than isolated isolated words and phrases. 5. Stay alert for details that are new to you, while you take note of familiar information. 6. Ask questions that will clarify further what you are listening to. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yMzDEK2ZhjQ Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=sample+of+stage+fright+pictures&safe=active&rlz=1 C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk01BdjbBbA9ncqwtQll4NSQdxxcDWQ:1592357573184 &tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=2vW5Pp1jhWF6yM%253A%252CwejVGpFzHAOYgM%252C _&vet=1&usg=AI4_kS5lt1Ca6e0aLfuAV6wgFUFz8Zs5w&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiX2ISc2ofqAhW O-HMBHS7TBzAQ9QEwBHoECAoQDQ&biw=1366&bih=576#imgrc=2vW5Pp1jhWF6yM: Look at the picture above. How would you describe the person? In what situation do you think he is? Have you been in a similar situation? Our listening selection shows you always to cope with such a situation. As you Listen Click on this link. https://youtu.be/yMzDEK2ZhjQ . Listen to an article on how to conquer stage fright. Take down notes to answer the following questions: 1. What is stage fright? 2. What happens when a person experiences stage fright? 3. What are the tips given by the writer to overcome stage fright? 4. What are some suggestions just before a person goes on stage? 5. Why is stage fright considered normal? 6. Do you agree with the idea? Explain your answer
  • 17. 6 For those who do not have the internet, I want you to read the informative text. Conquering Stage Fright Many people are gifted with different talents but most of them are just a part of the audience on certain occasions. Their stage fright is the very reason why some are not stage performers. It is normal to experience stage fright according to stage performers. Actors and actresses believe that you can overcome your stage fright. By changing your perception about stage fright and by following basic tips, you can conquer it. Try these tips to get you on stage without butterflies in your stomach. Practice. Constant practice makes perfect. You have to trust yourself. Self-confidence is the best way to control or overcome stage fright. Talk to yourself. Instead of thinking that you will be forgetting some lines, or that you will not be able to pronounce the words correctly, think that you will be delivering flawlessly, that you have talents to show, and that people will appreciate your extraordinary performance. Visualize. Picture yourself on stage with so many people listening as you do your part without committing a single mistake. Practice with a small audience. After you have practiced your piece alone, you may invite other family members or friends to listen as you rehearse. Or prior to inviting other people, you may rehearse in front of a mirror for you to see the needed improvements to your facial or body gestures. Are you beginning to feel confident as the curtain is about to unfold? Are you still nervous? If yes, don’t worry, that’s normal. Here are some suggestions to overcome nervousness. Yawn. Our body needs oxygen to keep our muscles relaxed. Yawning keeps our tight muscles relaxed and breathing becomes shallow. Stretch. Just like yawning, stretching also helps muscles relax. Do some simple exercises like shaking your hands and feet, rotating your neck and your head, then keep still until the spotlight hits you. Focus on the first few lines of your piece. After you have delivered the first few lines, you will notice that your nervousness is slightly disappearing. Trust yourself. Keep telling yourself that you will not make the audience notice it. After your successful performance, you will realize that you can overcomeyour stage fright and face the even work to your advantage if you learn to overcome it. After that flawless performance comes another until facing big audiences becomes fairly easy. After each performance and your audience is standing ovation acknowledging your extraordinary performance, bow your head gently and be humble.
  • 18. 7 What’s Is It Discussion Informative Writing Informative writing gives readers straightforward information about a topic. It is usually non-fiction. Purpose:  to inform or present information  to raise awareness and to do so objectively  to educate (use resources that are reliable and scholarly) Structure:  Introduction paragraph with thesis statement  Body paragraphs with support  Conclusion with a unique and engaging restatement of thesis Organization:  Logically – by date or time; by order of importance  Categorically – by definition; by theme  Contextually – by comparison and contrast; by historical or contemporary Types of Informative Writing a Factual recount – a type of informative text that has an objective of retelling a true event that happened in the past b Procedural – a type of informative text that has procedures to do one thing c Diary – a type of informative text that records the daily experiences of a person Sample Informative Text The most popular tourist attraction is the capital city Rome itself, with its rich cultural heritage. The Colosseum, Castle Sant'Angelo, Fontana di Trevi, the Pantheon, and the Vatican are some of the most visited sites in Rome. Venice is another city in Italy that is famous for its beautiful canals and gondolas. And if you are a lover of Italian art, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence is a place you cannot afford to miss. The city of Naples is known around the world for its architectural beauty and surely it is a photographer's delight. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, being on of the Seven Wonders of the World, attracts the highest number of visitors, not only in Italy, but in the whole of Europe. Source: https://penlighten.com/informative-essay-sample
  • 19. 8 It also gives you the opportunity to widen your business. Social Media is a great and cheap way to tools. Aside from that, it lets you meet people who can help you with your career. You can find out what companies are hiring and hire people to hire for your company, you can ask and get responds from your friends. Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=sample+of+informative+text&safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enP H861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk006EATHTTKdM-gfsj7yuGUFuLR- 4Q:1591398668399&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=yv81_iQNwJIanM%253A%252CfXrJTkIoGArvFM2 52C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_kQ6MRCcAkKunYhwURGfoZdWLyoVxQ&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjmm82C5uvpAhV XZt4KHfFlCz8Q9QEwGXoECAoQRQ&biw=1211&bih=526#imgrc=esKBqSNqD97W3M&imgdii=Luj0Q2W Ba7DVmM Journalistic Writing Journalistic writing is different from the other forms of literary texts. Unlike a short story, poem, or novel, a journalistic text is more closely related to essay. News reports, features, editorial, sports, and other columns in a newspaper or magazine are considered journalistic texts. Purpose:  To quickly inform (news articles)  To entertain (comics section, lifestyle column, feature)  To persuade (editorial, opinion, column) Structure:  Inverted pyramid
  • 20. 9 Source: https://i2.wp.com/d1fcpxzix8mbyc.cloudfront.net/wp- content/uploads/2016/03/inverted-pyramid.png?resize=1080%2C1250 Organization:  The essential and most interesting elements of a story are put at the beginning, with supporting information following in order of diminishing importance. Types of Journalistic Text Print journalism – type of journalism that focuses on print media, such as newspapers and magazines Broadcast journalism – type of journalism that is being broadcast, . radio and television Yellow journalism – type of journalism that uses exaggerating words or sensationalism; uses eye-catching heading
  • 21. 10 Sample of Journalistic Writing BAYOMBONG, NUEVA VIZCAYA—Vegetable farmers dumped tons of ripe tomatoes on roadsides here and in nearby Ifugao province due to a glut in supply and low market prices. Small and medium-sized tomatoes were found abandoned along the roads in Tinoc town in Ifugao on Tuesday, a week after tomatoes were also seen rotting on a roadside in Bambang town in this province. “The sorry sight of dumped tomatoes adds to the woes of farmers, who are suffering from the impact of the quarantine,” Adrian Albano, administrator of Ifugao Highland Farmers’ Forum, told the Inquirer by telephone on Thursday. According to farmers, the low retail price of tomatoes would prevent them from recovering their huge production expenses, as it would only cost them more to transport the produce to buyers. Source: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1287069/tomatoes-dumped-on-roadsides-in-nueva-vizcaya-ifugao#ixzz6OXT4S8BK MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines’ confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID- 19) cases surged to 20,626 as the Department of Health (DOH) reported Friday an additional 244 cases.Meanwhile, 82 more patients have recovered from the respiratory disease, bringing the total recoveries to 4,330. The new reporting system has resulted in a massive surge in new COVID-19 cases in recent days. But the DOH said the spike in cases does not mean that the outbreak is getting worse as it attributed the increase to the government’s increased testing capacity and “aggressive efforts” to catch up on the validation backlogs. Earlier, COVID-19 Response Deputy Chief Implementer Vince Dizon said the government is now eyeing to include asymptomatic patients in its “expanded targeted testing” program. This came as he reported that the country’s rated testing capacity increased to nearly 42,000 a day. However, the DOH earlier said that daily actual tests done by all the accredited laboratories is only around 8,000 to 9,000 as some testing centers face operational issues.There are currently 52 accredited laboratories nationwide, of which, 40 can use RT-PCR tests while the other 12 are testing centers licensed to use GeneXpert rapid tests. Source: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1286940/philippines-covid-19-cases-surge-to-20626-deaths-near-1000#ixzz6OXWOWfJO Follow us: @inquirerdotnet on Twitter | inquirerdotnet on Facebook Literary Writing Literary writing may not be entirely factual or timely. It may also cover imaginary events or ideas. It also tends to be subjective where the most important point may be found anywhere in the text. Purpose:  To express  To entertain  To communicate or appeal to the emotions
  • 22. 11 Structure:  Depends on the form Organization:  Logically – by date or time; by order of importance  Categorically – by definition; by theme  Contextually – by comparison and contrast; by historical or contemporary Types of Literary Text a Prose a Poetry Sample of Literary Writing It was a dark and stormy night. In her attic bedroom Margaret Murry, Wrapped in an old patchwork quilt, Sat on the foot of her bed and watched the trees tossing in the frenzied lashing of the wind. Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=example+of+literary+writing&safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enP H861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk00jmxfiDMwfa2aEagyeKIyczaBHg:1591402797085&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx =1&fir=gRn3g1UP-czbWM%253A%252CHSPNUUQlS5HexM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_- kSGpZ4XT5tyql2c5adcStVv_I5z0w&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjzq6iz9evpAhXOa94KHbL5DZ0Q9QEwBXoEC AoQHw&biw=1211&bih=477#imgrc=gRn3g1UP-czbWM:
  • 23. 12 Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=example+of+literary+writing&safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&sxsrf=ALeKk 00jmxfiDMwfa2aEagyeKIyczaBHg:1591402797085&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=gRn3g1UP- czbWM%253A%252CHSPNUUQlS5HexM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_- kSGpZ4XT5tyql2c5adcStVv_I5z0w&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjzq6iz9evpAhXOa94KHbL5DZ0Q9QEwBXoECAoQHw&biw=1211&bih=4 77#imgrc=gRn3g1UP-czbWM&imgdii=cCas5cph8zzknM What’s More Activity 3: Think it through: To further enhance your knowledge on distinguishing the types of writing, Kindly read carefully the given items then check the column where it belongs. Items Given Informative Journalistic Literary 1. Novel 2. Factual recount 3. Sports news 4. Editorial column 5. A recipe for carbonara 6. Movie review 7. A social etiquette article 8. A brochure on the detecting signs of drug abuse
  • 24. 13 9. Poem on entitled: Why Do I Love Thee 10. 10 Signs of Covid 19 as Lead news 11. Magazine 12. The play entitled: “Romeo and Juliet” 13. How to Cook Paella 14. The Legend of Maria Cristina Falls 15. Pres. Duterte may align Funds vs. Covid 19, says Driton Activity 4: Show your Writing Talent A. Informative Writing. After going through the activities, you are now very familiar on distinguishing the three (3) Types of Text. Choose one (1) of the following themes. Write your own informative article.  Friendship  Love  Courage  Loyalty B. Journalistic Writing. 1. Read an article/story from a newspaper. Cut it then, paste it on a short coupon bond. Take note on the following key points. 2. Write a short news article on another short coupon bond.  What is the story about?  Are there words you do not understand?  Give me an example of formal language used in the text?  Write/pick out the five (5) W’sof the article (who, what, where, when, why). Write down your answer at the bottom of your paper. C. Literary Writing. I want you to write one a short poem (1) as your example of literary writing base on what you have learned from the module.
  • 25. 14 What I Have Learned From the examples given, fill out the table below: Informative vs. Journalistic vs. Literary Writing Activity 4 A. Fill the table with the needed information ELEMENT/FEATURE INFORMATIVE JOURNALISTIC LITERARY Purpose Manner of reading (formal, informal, entertaining/dramatic) Format (where do you find the text?) Other Features B. How Well Do You Know? Directions: Identify whether the statement described is informative, journalistic or literary writing. 1.It uses a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing that leads to the appreciation of a variety of subjects. 2.It is the style of writing used to report news stories in newspapers, television broadcasts, on radio and on the Internet. 3.These are texts which intend to inform the reader or viewer. They use facts to describe and explain people, animals, objects, events, or phenomena.
  • 26. 15 4.It is a piece of written material, such as a book or poem, that has the purpose of telling a story or entertaining, as in a fictional novel. Its primary function as a text is usually aesthetic, but it may also contain political messages or beliefs. 5.The purpose of this text is to educate and enlighten the reader. It is a very straightforward piece of writing. C. After going through our lesson, let's fill in the triple Venn diagram shown below. In each circle, enumerate the individual and unique features of informative, journalistic and literary writing. However, on the overlapping parts of the circles, identify common features shared between these types of discourse. Making Connections to Your Schema Journalistic Writing Literary Writing Informative Writing
  • 27. 16 What Can I do Enrichment Activity Activity 8 Community Services Brochure The Community Services Brochure is your major output for this lesson. This brochure specifically informs the public of the services available in your community. As a form of informative writing, the brochure should present factual information and details about any club, center or key persons offering services in your barangay/community which you would like to feature. Other forms of informative writing include letters, reports, speeches, review and instruction pamphlet. The criteria for assessment will be: Focus, Content, Organization, Supports, Visuals, Clarity and Language Mechanics. Here are some ideas which might help you in the preparation and presentation of a Community Services Brochure. Keep these points in mind as you go through the process. Planning Stage Think of a plan for the preparation of your brochure in which you can communicate with your barangay but still following the social distancing technique where the following points should be covered:  You should create the simplest but presentable community services brochure you can do but sill have all the essentials that a brochure should have e.g. pictures you can make use, how to layout your brochure, what are the services in your barangay that you will feature that you want other people to know etc.  Identify the topic of your brochure.  Clarify the main requirements of the brochure which are the topic, purpose, and audience.  Clarify the purpose of the brochure. Answer these questions: Who will be interested to read the brochure? Who needs it?  Identify the key persons whom you will contact in the barangay, clubs or services that will be highlighted in your brochure.
  • 28. 17 Gathering Information Before you gather information, be sure that you have secured a permission to conduct an interview with the key persons, services or club you planned to feature.  Look for the key persons in the barangay you can make contact with, clubs, or centers, that offer services that make a difference.  Prepare questions (interview schedule) and put them in a logical order.  Call or visit and interview at least three (3) people to learn more about their services.  Make a list of their accomplishments/achievements and specialization.  Find out what they consider important to their success.  Collect photos, drawings, illustrations, or videos (if possible) showing ordinary people making a difference by performing their roles in life willingly and graciously. Drafting  Consolidate the information you have gathered, and choose what will be used in your brochure.  Use few, simple, short, catchy but meaningful sentences and captions  Think of the order you will use to organize the factual information.  Point out the help, support, and benefits the club, or key persons receive as well as the specialization or services they offer.  Explain the significance of the services to the target readers.  Through speaking and writing, report the services and needs of the clubs or organizations.  Use photos and charts in the presentation. Writing and Presenting  Ask your teachers to read and evaluate your brochure  Ask for comments and suggestions  Look over the first draft and rewrite it.  Polish your draft incorporating the suggestions made by your evaluators  Do the finishing touches and present your Community Services Brochure.
  • 29. 18 RUBRIC FOR COMMUNITY SERVICES BROCURE Criteria Expert 5 Proficient 4 Developing 3 Basic 2 Beginning 1 Focus Information included are relevantto the objectives of the brochure Most of the information are relevant except for one or two Some of the information are relevant but with noticeable irrelevant information Too many irrelevant included in the brochure No relevant information can be gleaned from the brochure Content Has all the required information(s ee checklist) and some additional information Has all the required information(see checklist) Has most of the required information Has little of the required information Organization Information is well- organized and coherent Information is well- organized and coherent except 1 Information is coherent but not very organized Information is confusing to the reader Support Well- supported headings/sub- headings and more Most of the headings/topics are well-supported Lacking support Visuals Graphics go well with the text. There is good mix of text and graphics The graphics go well with the textbut there are too many that they distract from the text Graphics go well with text but there are too few Graphics do not go well with the text and appear to be randomly chosen Graphics included are merely filters Attractivene ss (Layout) Has exceptionally attractive formatting Acceptable but could not havedone better Either too garish or too bland Clarity Purpose of brochure is clear to the reader Purpose is somewhat clear Purpose for making brochure is not clear to the reader
  • 30. 19 Criteria Expert 5 Proficient 4 Developing 3 Basic 2 Beginning 1 Language Mechanics (Writing conventions) Writing done in complete sentences Capitalization & punctuation are correct throughout the brochure 4-5 errors in grammar, capitalization & punctuation 6-7 errors in grammar, capitalization & punctuation 8-10 errors in grammar, capitalizatio n & punctuation 10 or more errors in grammar, capitalizatio n & punctuation Copies for organization Gave >20 copies Gave 15-19 copies Gave 10-14 copies Gave > 10 copies No copies Posted online Posted online with less than 5 suggestion Posted online with 6-10 suggestions/reactio ns for improvement Posted online with 11-15 suggestions/reactio ns for improvement Timeliness Submitted at least 2 days before deadline Submitted a day before deadline date Submitted on deadline date Submitted one (1) day after deadline date Submitted 2-4 days after deadline date *Points will be forfeited if work is submitted more than 5 days after deadline date Content Checklist:  Contact information: This often ends up being the flap or the back of the brochure; should contain all the ways your clubs or organization can be contacted (names, addresses, phone number, email, web address)  Mailing addresses: One of the outside panels of your brochure should have a return address for your organization and a blank area where you can stick a mailing label or write and address. Saves you the cost of envelopes!  Front cover. This should contain your name, logo, and slogan, but not much more. Keep it from getting too crowded and chaotic,but try to make the reader interested in opening the brochure up and reading on.  Features/benefits: This is usually the inside of the brochure. This part of your brochure should tell a bit about what your program does and what the benefits are to those who become involved.  Action: What can the reader do? This could focus on how the volunteer can pitch in and help the group or coalition, or it could focus on how the volunteer can benefit from the services him/herself. You can include both, if you’d like.  Elsewhere, if desired, a brief history of the organization, directions on how to access or use services provided, how the organization is funded, or information on thestaff.
  • 31. 20 Summary The learners will make personal connections by using their schema (background knowledge) in distinguishing between and among the types of text introduce and provided for them in this module. The learners will also be guided to apply what they have learned from this module in which they will make use of their daily life outside the four (4) walls of the classroom. Assessment: (Post-Test) I. Multiple Choice: Read the statements carefully. Encircle the best answer. 1It is a type of text which presents information that are found in radio, print or television. A.informative B. literary C. journalistic 2.It gives readers straightforward information about a topic. A. literary B. informative C. journalistic 3. It is a type of text which is usually non-fiction. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary 4.It is written originally by a writer. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative 5.It is a type of text which is defined as a wide variety of imaginative and creative writing. B. literary B. journalistic C. informative 6.It serves to inform or discloses information. B. journalistic B. informative C. literary 7.It is a type of text which leads to the appreciation of the cultural heritage of students. B. literary B. journalistic C. informative 8.It is a type of writing which used to report news stories. B. literary B. journalistic C. informative 9.It has a unique text type and construction level. B. informative B. literary C. journalistic
  • 32. 21 10. It is a type of text in which the intention is to inform the reader about a specific topic. B. literary B. informative C. journalistic 11. It is a type of text which is instructive and instructional by nature. B. journalistic B. literary C. informative 12. It is a type of text which is written using special text features that allows the reader to easily find key information and understand the main topic. B. informative B. journalistic C. literary 13.It is a type of text which are found in online journalism. B. literary B. informative C. journalistic 14. It involves finding, creating, editing and publishing of news to be shared. B. informative B. journalistic C. literary 15. It is a type of text in which visual representation may include: charts, diagrams, and tables and these are accompanied by captions that further explain the image. B. informative B. literary C. journalistic 16. It gives interests to people who would like to be inform of something. B. Journalistic B. literary C. informative 17. It imparts straight forward information and facts; but never personal opinions. B. literary B. journalistic C. informative 18.It relates to, or have the characteristics of humane learning. B. literary B. informative C. journalistic 19.It is a type of text that imparts knowledge to the readers. B. journalisticB. literary C. informative 20.It is a type of text which has shorter texts like for example: personal essays, opinion pieces, speeches and literature essay. B. informative B. journalistic C. literary
  • 33. 22 II. Learner will identify the type of text use in the following articles such as:informative, journalistic or literary. Encircle the letter of your answer. Text A 1. A. informative B. literary C. journalistic Text B 2. A. journalistic B. informative C. literary Text C 3. A. informative B. journalistic C. literary Text D 4. A. literary B. journalistic C. informative Text E 5. A. journalistic B. literary C. informative They walked downtown in the light of mother-of-pearl, to the Majestic, and their way to seats by the light of the screen, in the exhilarating smell of stale tobacco, rank sweat, and dirty drawers, while the piano played fast music and galloping horses raised a grandiose lag of dust. A Death in the Family by James Agee A fire of undetermined origin razed to the ground a three-story apartment of Juana de la Cruz 456 Lapulapu St., Valencia City last night. Five fire companies subdued it within an hour. The damage, estimated at P5 million, was covered by insurance. Toledo, Spain (Reuters) - Scientists believe they could discover life outside the Solar System within the next 25 years covered by insurance. “Yes, definitely, there’s life out there, “Mike Kaplan, director of US space agency NASA’s origins program, told Reuters during a meeting of Astronomers in Toledo. The Philippine Star, 15 March 1996 Scientific theories are not guesses or random ideas. A Scientific theory is a collection of well-supported hypotheses based on repeated testing that explains some aspect about the natural world. It was dark and stormy. In her attic bedroom Margaret Murry, wrapped in an old patchwork quilt, sat on the foot of her bed and watched the trees tossing in the frenzied lashing of the wind.
  • 34. 23 Activity 7 Element/Feature INFORMATIVE JOURNALISTIC LITERARY Purpose * To inform the reader about the natural or social world * It conveys information accurately. * it increase knowledge, explain a procedure, or explore a concept in depth * informs the public by reporting on local, national and global news and events * journalists strive to write articles that have wide appeal and can be easily understand * it is a piece of writing, such as a book, poem, etc. Manner of Reading (formal, informal, entertaining/dramatic) * uses a variety of sentence structure to help the reader from getting bored, and ideas are organized in a way that makes sense * each body paragraph should focus on explaining a single idea that was introduced in the thesis statement and develops the topic in a logical order * Journalism is about telling people what they didn’t know, * makes the reader want to about it more * reading literary writing like novels, poems is different from reading magazines and news stories * readers get immersed in reading stories and want to get to know the characters and wonder about the outcome
  • 35. 24 Format (where do you find the text) * the basic structure of informative essay is very simple * it needs to have beginning, middle and end. * formal by nature that follows the introduction, body, and conclusion respectively * follows the 5W’s (who, what, where, when, why) question in order for it to report a news stories * follows the introduction, body and conclusion which is the basic structure to maintain in most formats of academic writing when it comes to reading stories * has literary element that describes the ways the author uses words- word choice, sentence structure, figurative language and sentence arrangement all work together to establish mood, images, and meaning in the text. Other Features Structure: * clear opening * general information about the topic * summarizing conclusion * interesting, easy to read the layout Language * present tense * first person or third person (depends on topic -can be personal) * connectives to make it clear and coherent * mostly facts (but can contain opinion if its a personal text) * rhetorical questions to engage reader’s interest * specific examples * bullet point summarizes may be appropriate/help * a style of writing that is used to report news stories in a variety of media formats * obvious characteristics of the style include short, simple sentences and paragraphs that present objective stories based on facts * journalists use quotes to give the story credibility * usually fictional, and it makes use of figurative symbolic language * usually fiction that displays a sense or reality * tension or conflict * artistic unity ( main idea is conveyed) * use figurative language ( simile, metaphor, irony, symbolism, etc.)
  • 36. 25 References ( print and non-print) Campomanes, IPJ. (2017). “Module 1, Lesson 1: Enhancing the Self.” A Simplified Learning Module for English Grade 9 BEC K-12/Open High School Program (OHSP). A learning material submitted to the Division of Valencia City, pp. 48-50. Lapid, M.G.; Serrano, J.B.(2018). English Communication Arts and Skills through Anglo- American and Philippine Literature, English 9 (Eight Edition). Quezon City: Phoenix Publishing House, Inc., pp. 106-108. Natividad, V. R. (2017). English in Perspective Anglo-American Literature,English 9 Second Edition). Quezon City: Abiva Publishing House, Inc., pp. 116-117. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCmzoYxl9LA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKKDH2whXzw http://www.wams.org/characteristics-of-a-literary-text/ https://www.google.com/search?q=sample+of+text+type&rlz=1C1CHBF_enPH861PH86 2&oq=sample+of+text+type&aqs=chrome..0j69i57j0l6.9653j0j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=U TF-8 https://www.google.com/search?safe=active&rlz=1C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&sxsrf=AL eKk00g2zGOZAynUiX7- 9I3QzQ3gOymqQ%3A1591520746848&ei=6q3cXtCjM5CsoASGgLvQAg&q=sample+of +informative+text&oq=sample+of+informative&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQARgAMgQIIxAn MgIIADICCAAyAggAMgIIADICCAAyAggAMgIIADICCAAyAggAOgQIABBHOgYIABAW EB46BQgAEJECOgUIABCxAzoHCAAQFBCHAlD40QtYlZEMYKKhDGgAcAF4AIABwg GIAYQYkgEEMC4yMJgBAKABAaoBB2d3cy13aXo&sclient=psy-ab http://static1.squarespace.com/static/53e7dd4fe4b0fb1fc62c318a/t/56a253caab2810f33 9a7ca59/1453478859875/writing_features.pdf https://www.google.com/search?q=what+are+the+features+of+journalistic+writing&rlz=1 C1CHBF_enPH861PH862&oq=what+are+the+features&aqs=chrome.0.0j69i57j0l6.243 23j0j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 For inquiries and feedback, please write or call: Department of Education – Division of Iligan City Office Address: General Aguinaldo, St., Iligan City Telefax: (063)221-6069 E-mail Address: iligan.city@deped.gov.ph