1. Does the submission meet the requirements: Check the submission requirements and guidelines to ensure that your submission meets the requirements. News articles usually require complete, accurate, objective and newsworthy content, which is in line with the editing direction of the media.
2. Whether the format and structure are accurate: Check whether the format and structure of your news articles meet the requirements of the media. News articles usually include title, introduction, text and ending, and should have clear paragraph structure and logic.
3. Content quality and news value: editors can judge whether or not to pass according to the quality and news value of the manuscript. Make sure that your manuscript has enough news value and exclusive reports to attract readers' interest, and provide independent news opinions or practical information.
4. Expression and grammatical errors: The editor may also pay attention to your expression and grammatical errors. Make sure that your manuscript is fluent, free from typos and punctuation, and follow the media style and writing norms.
5. Editorial team requirements: Editors can select manuscripts according to their own needs and resource constraints. Sometimes it may be because the editorial team has received a similar manuscript or the current publication is full, which leads to your manuscript not being selected.
If you are not sure about the specific reasons, you can try to contact the editorial department and ask them for their feedback and suggestions on your manuscript. Different media may have different peer review standards and procedures, so the specific situation may vary from media to media.