Lesson 674 of 1234
Make a Tiny Newspaper About Your Week with AI
AI can help turn your week's events into a fun mini-newspaper.
Lesson map
What this lesson covers
Learning path
The main moves in order
- 1The big idea
- 2journalism
- 3writing
- 4summarizing
Concept cluster
Terms to connect while reading
Section 1
The big idea
AI can help turn your week's events into a fun mini-newspaper. You bring the imagination — AI is your idea-buddy. The best part is choosing what to keep, what to swap, and what to make your own. AI is fast at giving you lots of starter ideas, but the taste, the personality, and the final choices come from you. That's what makes the project feel like yours.
Working on a kids newspaper project teaches a useful skill: how to ask for help and then judge what you get. Real artists, designers, and writers do this all the time — they brainstorm, they get feedback, then they pick the best parts. Using AI is a kid-sized version of that same process.
How kids newspaper projects actually work
- A newspaper has a headline, a short article, and sometimes a picture caption.
- A 'headline' is a short, catchy title that grabs attention.
- Real journalists check facts — kid newspapers should too.
Here's a concrete example: imagine a one-page newspaper about your school or family. With a clear idea like that, you can ask AI for help and get back something you can actually use. Vague prompts like 'make something cool' usually give vague answers. Specific prompts with details — a topic, a length, a tone — give you something you can actually work with.
Prompts to try
- 'Help me write a 3-sentence article about our school field trip.'
- 'Suggest a catchy headline.'
- 'Write a fun caption for a photo of my dog.'
- 'Make sure facts I gave are not changed.'
Notice how each prompt has a clear ask: a topic, a number, a style, and sometimes a rule like 'kid-friendly.' Stacking those details together is a trick that gets you better answers.
Facts come from you
The most important rule of journalism is honesty. AI can help you word things, but the facts must come from what really happened. Don't let AI invent details about real people or events.
Try it!
- 1Pick one true event you want to write about.
- 2List 3 facts about it.
- 3Ask AI for a headline and 3-sentence article using your facts.
If you don't love the first answer, ask again. AI is happy to give you three more options. Picking your favorite is part of the fun, and swapping out one piece while keeping another is totally allowed. Mix, match, and remix until it feels right.
When you're done, share your work with someone who'll appreciate it — a parent, a sibling, a friend, a teacher. Sharing finishes the project and turns a private idea into something real. Plus, hearing what other people think gives you ideas for next time.
Key terms in this lesson
End-of-lesson quiz
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