Study Vault
All PostsFlashcardsResourcesAI ChatBlog
  1. Home
  2. /↳All Posts
  3. /↳English Language
  4. /↳Writing an Article
Study VaultStudy Vault

Free, comprehensive study notes for CSEC students.

matthewlloydw@gmail.com

Navigate

  • Home
  • All Posts
  • Flashcards
  • Resources
  • AI Chat

Community

  • Contributors
  • Changelog
  • Suggest a Feature
  • My Suggestions
  • Bookmarks

Mathematics and Science

  • Mathematics
  • Additional Mathematics
  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Physics

Arts and Humanities

  • Caribbean History
  • Geography

Business and Human Development Studies

  • Principles of Accounts
  • Principles of Business
  • Economics

Modern Languages

  • English A (Language)
  • English B (Literature)
  • French
  • Spanish

Technical Studies and Creative Arts

  • Electrical & Electronic Technology
  • Information Technology

© 2026 Matthew Williams. Made with other contributors for all.

English Language

Writing an Article

PDF
Matthew Williams
|April 21, 2026|4 min read
Section BWritten Factual Response

Structure, conventions, and annotated example for writing a factual article

Purpose

An article is a piece of writing published in a newspaper, magazine, or newsletter, intended for a general or specific audience. Articles may:

  • Describe — give details about a person, place, event, or thing
  • Explain — make clear why or how something happened
  • Inform — tell the reader about something
  • Instruct — tell a reader how to do something

Newspaper Article / Report

  • A newspaper article should be factual and concise.
  • Use language appropriate for the average reader.
  • This type of writing requires consciousness on the part of the writer in aiming to provide unbiased and factual information.

Structure

  • Catchy Title/Headline — centred, concise, and relevant to the topic
  • Byline — "By [Author's Name]" — centred, directly below the title
  • Introduction — brief overview of the topic or event
  • Body — 1–3 paragraphs covering main points, supporting evidence, and any counter-argument
  • Conclusion — brief closing statement, outcome, or final relevant detail

An article typically ranges from 3 to 5 paragraphs in total (introduction, body, conclusion).

Key Conventions

  • Write in third person unless the task specifies otherwise
  • Use formal language throughout
  • Each body paragraph should have a clear topic sentence and flow logically
  • Avoid slang, contractions, exaggeration, and unsupported personal opinions
  • Aim to provide unbiased and factual information
Previous in syllabus order
Guide to Persuasive (Argumentative) Writing
Next in syllabus order
Writing a Letter