Mini-Project 4: A One-Page Press Release for Your Local Paper
Write a journalist-ready press release for an outreach event or competition result, formatted to the conventions reporters expect so it actually gets picked up.
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Local newspapers and TV stations love a good 'local students do impressive things' story, but only if you hand it to them in the format they expect. A press release is a one-page document a reporter can lightly edit and run.
The format (top to bottom):
- Header:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEin caps, top-left. - Contact block: a named media contact (an adult mentor for off-hours calls), phone, email, and your team website/socials.
- Headline: active, specific, ~10 words. Bad: 'Our Team Did an Event.' Good: 'Local FRC Team 1234 Teaches 200 Elementary Students to Build Robots.'
- Dateline + lead:
CITY, STATE — Month Day, Year —followed by a lead paragraph answering who, what, when, where, why in 2-3 sentences. Reporters may print only this paragraph, so it must stand alone. - Body (2-3 short paragraphs): the details and one human quote from a student or mentor. Quotes are gold — reporters love a printable line like, 'Watching a third-grader's face light up when their robot moves is why we do this,' said team captain Jane Doe.
- Boilerplate: a standard 'About Team 1234' paragraph you reuse every time (founding year, school, mission, sponsors).
- End mark:
###or-30-centered, the traditional journalism signal that the release is over.
Length and timing: Keep it to 300-500 words, roughly one page. Journalists prefer concise. Send event announcements 2-4 weeks ahead for coverage; send results within 24-48 hours while they're still news.
Worked example lead:
SPRINGFIELD, IL — March 14, 2026 — Springfield High School's robotics team, FIRST Robotics Competition Team 1234 'The Voltage,' won the Engineering Inspiration Award at the Central Illinois Regional this weekend, qualifying the all-student team for the FIRST Championship in Houston for the first time in school history.
That single sentence gives a reporter a complete, runnable story.
Photos and consent: Attach 2-3 high-resolution horizontal photos with caption text and a photographer credit. Reporters often skip stories with no usable art. Important: it is FIRST policy not to print a minor's name with their picture without specific permission from the parent or guardian, so confirm permission before captioning students by name (or use first names / unnamed wide shots).
Distribution:
- Build a media list: the education or community reporter at each local outlet (find the byline, email them directly — not the generic newsroom inbox).
- Follow up once, politely, 2-3 days later.
Keep a reusable template and your boilerplate in your team drive so any student can fill in the specifics and send within an hour of an event.
Key takeaways
- Use the standard structure: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, contact block, headline, dateline lead, body with a quote, boilerplate, and ###.
- Keep it to 300-500 words and make the lead paragraph stand alone — that may be all that gets printed.
- Email the specific education/community reporter by name, not the generic newsroom inbox, and attach hi-res horizontal photos.
- Send announcements 2-4 weeks ahead and results within 24-48 hours; never caption a minor by name without documented parent permission (FIRST policy).
Go deeper
Lesson quiz
RequiredAnswer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.
1.Your one-page press release should follow the 'inverted pyramid.' What does that mean for how you order the content?
2.What should the lead (first) paragraph of your press release accomplish?
3.Which element is the standard closing block of a press release that gives a short, reusable description of your team or organization?
Answer every question to submit.