Consider the following seven shots, all taking place outside the same home and each listed in random temporal order:
1) Static shot of the home with an audible scream
2) Tracking shot of a gurney carrying a body (covered with a sheet) and being wheeled out of the home by paramedics
3) Handheld shot of a man running out the side door of the home
4) Tracking shot of the woman getting out of her car, strolling up the walkway, collecting the mail, and entering the home
5) Drone shot of the woman driving up the street and parking her car
6) Static shot of a man entering the home through the side door [feel free to make this the same man as in 3) or another man]
7) Static shot of an ambulance arriving at the scene
Then, arrange these seven shots to tell a story, placing an edit of your choice between each shot. Be sure to include an edit before the first shot and after the last as well. There should be a total of eight edits in your shot list. You are free to list the number for each shot (rather than write out each one word for word).
Choice of edits includes the following: CUT (simplest edit, usually used between shots in a scene, suggesting the same place and time); DISSOLVE (suggests a passage of time, often used to transition between shots in the same space and scene); FADE IN (darkness to light, this edit usually signals a new place, time, and/or scene); FADE OUT (light to darkness, this edit usually signals the end of the scene, act, or even movie); WIPE (can be used versatilely to show different spaces within the same scene or like a fade; a shot is 'wiped' away and replaced by another one, typically from L to R or R to L, but sometimes diagonally, too). You do not need to use each edit equally or at all.