Teach Caption Writing With Video Lesson Plan
Updated by Walsworth Yearbooks
Pictures are worth a thousand words, but the stories within them are incomplete without captions.
Captions are easier to write once you know the formula, and yearbook advisers are telling us they would like more training materials for their staffs on topics such as caption writing. Walsworth is listening, and has responded with a caption-writing lesson, complete with a video called “A Simple Approach to Great Captions,” Lesson Overview, one pre-video activity, two post-video assignments and three handouts you can access at the links below on this page.
Renee Burke, yearbook adviser at Boone High School in Orlando, Fla., wrote the script and is the presenter in the video. She said caption writing was a good choice for a video and lesson plan because captions are important in yearbooks.
“I personally get so annoyed when I am reading a yearbook, or even a magazine, and there isn’t a caption for a picture. I want to know details,” Burke said.
Burke also said caption writing is easier to approach because it’s a group of smaller pieces instead of a multi-paragraph article.
“Body copy can be intimidating. Oftentimes people don’t know where to start or they feel like they’ve said the same thing year after year. Also, small schools feel that since they have a small book it’s hard to give up space for body copy,” Burke said.
“I see such value in captions and feel staffs can overlook their importance,” Burke said.
Overview –
Exercises –
Caption Writing Exercise.5Ws.1H
Caption Writing Exercise.TellmeMore
Handouts –
Tag:Captions