Have you launched your school web radio and are looking to structure an attractive and varied programming schedule? The key to success lies in regular features that build listener loyalty. Whether you are in middle school, high school, or university, here are 16 formats that will transform your station into a true reference media outlet!
Before you start, check out the interview with Paris 8 University, which launched its own school/university web radio. Marie, in charge of the radio, shares the benefits of this school web radio as well as the secrets to its success.
I. News & Current Affairs Features
II. Portrait & Profile Features
IV. Practical & Advice Features
Format: 3-5 minutes, daily or weekly
Concept: Your students select a national or international news event and explain it in their own words. The goal? To make information accessible without distortion and to develop the critical thinking skills of your listeners.
How to Structure the Broadcast:
Educational Tip: Collaborate with a history/geography, economics, or philosophy teacher to validate analyses and enrich the content. This feature develops skills in documentary research, summarization, and oral expression. An excellent project to integrate into a recognized media literacy cycle.
Format: 2-4 minutes, weekly
Concept: A quirky or serious question posed to various members of the school community. Examples: “What’s your worst pop quiz anecdote?”, “How do you imagine your ideal job?”, “If you could change one school rule, what would it be?”
Production Tips:
This feature teaches students how to connect with different audiences, builds community, gives a voice to everyone, and often generates funny or touching moments that will make your programming memorable.
Find the best microphones for outdoor interviews, very practical for street interviews!
Format: 5-8 minutes, weekly
Concept: Focus on news from the neighborhood, city, or region. Opening of a new business, cultural event, civic initiative, municipal project… Your school web radio becomes the ultimate local media outlet!
Why It Works:
Concrete Example: Interview with the manager of the new organic café that just opened, report on the renovation of the skatepark, meeting with a local association that is recruiting volunteers…
Possible Partnerships: City Hall, tourist offices, merchants’ associations, local media. These locally anchored radio projects are particularly valued during academic evaluations.
Format: 3-5 minutes, weekly
Concept: Decoding the trends, challenges, and news buzzing on TikTok, Instagram, YouTube… with a critical and positive eye. Perfect for connecting your school web radio with your audience’s interests!
Suggested Structure:
Educational Angle: This feature is ideal for addressing digital media literacy. Teachers can use it as a support to discuss fake news, online privacy (GDPR), the influence of algorithms, and responsible digital practices.
Example Topics:
Speaking of social media, find out in this article how radio stations go viral on TikTok (link in French).
Format: 8-12 minutes, weekly
Concept: Sound portrait of a staff member who deserves to be known: the educational assistant who is passionate about theater, the school librarian who lived abroad for 10 years, the student who started their micro-business, the cleaner who has an incredible life story…
How to Prepare the Interview:
Questions that always work:
Educational Impact: This feature develops empathy, breaks down stereotypes, and reveals the human richness of the institution. It teaches students the art of the in-depth interview, a demanding but formative exercise in any radio training cycle.
Format: 5-7 minutes, weekly
Concept: A shorter, more rhythmic version of the portrait, focusing on a student at the institution. Their passions, their journey, their projects, what makes them unique.
Dynamic Format:
The Express Questionnaire:
This feature highlights students and creates a positive dynamic within the institution. It is an excellent tool for teachers wishing to showcase the diversity of their students’ talents as part of a citizenship education project.
Format: 6-10 minutes, bi-weekly
Concept: Exploration of little-known, surprising, or emerging professions. Water slide tester, perfumery “nose,” AI ethicist, animal behaviorist, underwater archaeologist…
Show Structure:
Resources: ONISEP, LinkedIn, alumni networks, parents… This feature fits perfectly into the career guidance path (Parcours Avenir in France) and can be co-constructed with teachers in charge of orientation.
Bonus: Create a sound library of careers, reusable for the institution’s orientation fairs!
Format: 5-8 minutes, weekly
Concept: A student or teacher presents 3 to 5 tracks they are listening to right now, along with the story behind each choice. You can also consult our complete guide on how to create a perfect radio playlist.
What Makes the Feature Captivating:
Typical Format:
Variant: “Thematic Playlist” (tracks for studying, for morning motivation, for a road trip, for a party with friends…). This feature can be streamed online on your platform and often generates a lot of engagement!
Format: 6-10 minutes, weekly
Concept: A deep dive into a musical artist (known or emerging): biography, style, essential albums, anecdotes, news. An opportunity to discover new talents or rediscover classics.
Effective Structure:
Editorial Tip: Alternate between very well-known artists (for the audience) and new discoveries (for cultural enrichment). Get your listeners involved by asking them to vote for the next artist to feature!
Educational Context: Ideal for working with music teachers, language teachers (international artists), and history teachers (contextualizing musical movements)…
Format: 5-7 minutes, weekly
Concept: Review and recommendation of a TV series (Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video, Arte…). Synopsis without spoilers, why it’s worth watching, for what audience, and most importantly: should you binge or not?
Sections to Include:
Thematic Variant: “Special Horror Series,” “Special French Comedies,” “Special Historical Series”…
This feature generates a lot of interaction! Students love to debate series, and this can motivate them to get involved in the school web radio. Consider creating a system of differing opinions with two hosts who may have different viewpoints.
Format: 5-minute limit, weekly
Concept: Dynamic presentation of a book (novel, comic, manga, essay…) to make listeners want to read it. The challenge: be concise, impactful, and, above all, **DO NOT** spoil it!
Ultra-Effective Structure:
Partnerships: Collaborate with the CDI (school library) or the municipal library! The librarian can help you select varied titles and structure your reviews. The featured books can then be highlighted within the institution.
Bonus: Organize a “Radio Book Club” once a month where several students debate the same book they have all read.
Format: 7-10 minutes, bi-weekly
Concept: Recounting a fascinating but little-known historical event, an incredible anecdote, an forgotten figure… Storytelling serving History!
Examples of Hot Topics:
How to Make It Captivating:
Interdisciplinary Work: Excellent project to undertake with history/geography teachers! This feature fits perfectly into school curricula and allows certain topics to be explored in depth, making them accessible and attractive.
Format: 5-7 minutes, weekly
Concept: A simple, quick, and beginner-friendly recipe, presented clearly and engagingly. Ideal for students who want to learn how to cook!
Step-by-Step Structure:
Recipe Ideas that Work:
Participatory Bonus: Invite a member of the canteen staff to share one of their recipes! Or ask students to send in their traditional family recipes.
Format: 3-5 minutes, weekly
Concept: A feature dedicated to ecology, sustainable development, and concrete actions to take daily. Practical, positive, and actionable!
Types of Content:
Example Topics:
Educational Framework: This feature fits perfectly into the goals of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) supported by the Academy. It can be co-hosted with eco-delegates and science teachers.
Format: 10-15 minutes, bi-weekly
Concept: A divisive topic, two sides, well-constructed arguments. The goal is not to convince but to learn how to debate with respect and listening.
Topics Adapted for the School Environment:
Golden Rules of Radio Debate:
Preparation: Organize a preparation session with participants where they list their arguments and anticipate those of the opposing side. Teach them to source their information and to distinguish between opinion and fact.
Educational Value: Develops argumentation, critical thinking, active listening, and respect for opposing views. An essential democratic exercise within civic education!
Format: 5-8 minutes, weekly
Concept: Review of a significant sporting performance (recent or historical), an individual or collective feat, with analysis and context.
Feature Structure:
Topic Ideas:
Variant: “Athlete Profile” focusing on the journey, training, sacrifices, and values of sport.
Link with the Institution: Give a voice to PE teachers, invite high-level student athletes to share their experiences, cover UNSS competitions… This promotes sports in the institution and can motivate less athletic students to get involved!
These 16 features offer a wide range of formats to feed your school web radio throughout the year. The essential thing is to start with a few that match your desires and your team’s talents, then gradually enrich your programming.
A vibrant school web radio rests on three pillars: regularity, content quality, and community involvement. The most successful radio projects are those where teachers and students collaborate in a structured framework, where everyone can learn while expressing themselves freely.
Your school web radio can become much more than a simple communication tool: a true community-based media recognized by your Academy, a unifying project that connects the entire educational community, and a formidable learning ground for your students.
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