📰 Year 8 Critical Thinking

RNZ News Analysis Framework

Arohaehae Kōrero Pāpāho • Critically Analysing News Media

📻 Why RNZ?

Radio New Zealand (RNZ) is Aotearoa's public broadcaster—funded by the government but editorially independent. This means:

  • ✅ No advertising revenue influencing content
  • ✅ Charter commitment to accuracy and balance
  • ✅ Coverage of Māori and Pacific perspectives
  • ✅ In-depth journalism on complex issues

However, even reliable sources require critical analysis. This framework helps you read any news critically—not just RNZ.

📋 Step 1: Identify the Article Type

Different types of articles have different purposes:

📰 News Report

Factual account of events

Should be balanced, factual, use quotes from multiple sources

💭 Opinion/Editorial

Writer's personal view

Clearly labelled; presents an argument or stance

📝 Feature/Long Read

In-depth exploration

More storytelling; background and context

🔍 Analysis

Expert interpretation

Explains why something matters; adds expert perspective

💡 Tip: Check the Label

RNZ often labels articles with tags like "Opinion", "Analysis", or includes "COMMENT" in headlines. If there's no label, it's probably a news report and should be more balanced.

❓ Step 2: Apply the 5Ws + H

Good journalism answers these questions. Check if the article addresses each:

WHO?

Who is involved? Who is quoted? Who might be affected?

WHAT?

What happened? What are the key facts?

WHEN?

When did this happen? Is it current?

WHERE?

Where did this take place? Local or national?

WHY?

Why did this happen? What caused it?

HOW?

How did this happen? How does it affect people?

🗣️ Step 3: Analyse the Sources

Who is quoted in the article? Good journalism includes diverse voices:

Government/official sources
Opposition/critics
Experts (academics, specialists)
Affected community members
Māori voices/perspectives
Industry/business representatives

Questions to ask:

  • Are multiple perspectives represented?
  • Who might benefit from this story being told this way?
  • Whose voice is loudest? Whose is missing?
  • Are Māori perspectives included when relevant?

📝 Step 4: Examine the Language

Words carry weight. Analyse how language shapes the story:

Headline Analysis

Neutral: "Government announces new policy"

Loaded: "Government slammed over controversial policy"

Word Choice Spectrum

Negative Neutral Positive

Examples: "protester" vs "activist" vs "advocate" | "claims" vs "says" vs "reveals"

🔍 Look For:

  • Emotive language: Words designed to create strong feelings
  • Passive voice: "Mistakes were made" (hides who did it)
  • Qualifying words: "allegedly", "reportedly", "sources say"
  • Statistics: Are they contextualised? What's the source?

📄 News Article Analysis Worksheet

Article Title:

URL/Source:

Date Published:

Article Type:

News
Opinion
Feature
Analysis

Summary (2-3 sentences)

Sources Quoted

List each person/organisation quoted and their role:

Perspectives Included

Pro/supporter view
Against/critic view
Expert/neutral view
Affected people's view
Māori perspective
Government view

Language Analysis

Find 3 examples of language choices and explain their effect:

What's Missing?

What questions remain unanswered? What perspectives are not included?

My Assessment

Overall, I think this article is:

Well-balanced and fair
Mostly balanced with some gaps
One-sided but clearly labelled
Potentially biased

Because:

🔄 Extension: Compare Multiple Sources

For the same story, how do different outlets cover it?

Source 1: RNZ

Headline:

Key angle:

Source 2: __________

Headline:

Key angle:

Differences I noticed:

Why might they differ?

📚 Kupu Māori — Media Vocabulary

Pāpāho Media, broadcast
Rīpoata Report
Whakaaro Opinion, thought
Pono Truth, honest
Tika Correct, accurate
Arohaehae Critical analysis

👩‍🏫 Teacher Notes

Curriculum Links: NZC Level 4 English (Critical Literacy), Social Studies (Media & Society)

Suggested Activities:

  • Compare coverage of the same event across RNZ, Stuff, NZ Herald
  • Analyse RNZ's "The Detail" podcast episodes
  • Track a developing story over multiple days
  • Compare English-language coverage with Te Ao Māori News or Waatea News

Discussion Points:

  • What does it mean for a broadcaster to be "publicly funded but editorially independent"?
  • How does advertising revenue affect commercial media?
  • Why is diversity in media voices important for democracy?