Asked by mikaela
every informative text should have
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Every informative text should have:
- Clear purpose: state what the reader will learn or why the information matters.
- Intended audience: tailor tone, detail, and vocabulary to who will read it.
- Accurate facts: verify data and claims before publishing.
- Reliable sources: cite or link to verifiable references.
- Context: explain background so facts are meaningful.
- Clear structure: a logical order (lead → body → conclusion) and visible signposting.
- A strong opening/summary: a concise lead or abstract with the main point(s).
- Definitions for terms and acronyms: or avoid unnecessary jargon.
- Relevant details only: prioritize information that supports the purpose.
- Evidence and examples: show how claims are supported or applied.
- Concise language and short sentences: ease comprehension and scanning.
- Readable layout: headings, subheadings, bullets, and white space.
- Visuals where helpful: charts, diagrams, or images with captions and alt text.
- Attribution and date: who wrote it and when it was last updated.
- Neutral, transparent tone: avoid misleading emphasis or hidden bias.
- Key takeaway or action: a final summary, recommendation, or next step.
- Accessibility: plain language, alt text, and consideration of assistive readers.
- Revision and fact-checking: editing for clarity, accuracy, and flow.
Quick writer’s checklist:
1. What’s the one thing the reader must know? Put it up front.
2. Who is the reader? Adjust level of detail and language.
3. Are all facts sourced? Add citations or links.
4. Is the text scannable? Use headings/bullets.
5. Did you define specialized terms?
6. Add a short conclusion or next step.
7. Proofread for clarity and accuracy.
If you want, I can turn this into a printable checklist, a short template for beginnings/endings, or adapt it for a specific audience (e.g., medical, technical, business).
- Clear purpose: state what the reader will learn or why the information matters.
- Intended audience: tailor tone, detail, and vocabulary to who will read it.
- Accurate facts: verify data and claims before publishing.
- Reliable sources: cite or link to verifiable references.
- Context: explain background so facts are meaningful.
- Clear structure: a logical order (lead → body → conclusion) and visible signposting.
- A strong opening/summary: a concise lead or abstract with the main point(s).
- Definitions for terms and acronyms: or avoid unnecessary jargon.
- Relevant details only: prioritize information that supports the purpose.
- Evidence and examples: show how claims are supported or applied.
- Concise language and short sentences: ease comprehension and scanning.
- Readable layout: headings, subheadings, bullets, and white space.
- Visuals where helpful: charts, diagrams, or images with captions and alt text.
- Attribution and date: who wrote it and when it was last updated.
- Neutral, transparent tone: avoid misleading emphasis or hidden bias.
- Key takeaway or action: a final summary, recommendation, or next step.
- Accessibility: plain language, alt text, and consideration of assistive readers.
- Revision and fact-checking: editing for clarity, accuracy, and flow.
Quick writer’s checklist:
1. What’s the one thing the reader must know? Put it up front.
2. Who is the reader? Adjust level of detail and language.
3. Are all facts sourced? Add citations or links.
4. Is the text scannable? Use headings/bullets.
5. Did you define specialized terms?
6. Add a short conclusion or next step.
7. Proofread for clarity and accuracy.
If you want, I can turn this into a printable checklist, a short template for beginnings/endings, or adapt it for a specific audience (e.g., medical, technical, business).
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