3. 1. What is a Literacy Narrative? Come up with a specific definition as a group.
2. What elements are specific to this genre? Be specific!
3. Answer the following questions based on Write or Wrong Identity:
• What is the PURPOSE of the essay?
• Who is the AUDIENCE? How do you know?
• What is the author's STANCE? How do you know?
• Are there specific elements of MEDIUM or DESIGN that the author had to
address?
• How did the author tailor this essay to the Literacy Narrative genre?
• How did the author use description? Pay attention to the senses here! (see
page 45)
• How did the author use key people? (see page 45)
• Did the author use dialogue? If so, what was the purpose and what did it
add to the narrative? If not, why not? (see page 46)
• How did the author answer the "what happened" question? (see page 46)
• What is the significance of the story? (see page 46)
• What organizational structure did the author use? (see pages 46-47)
5. • This project asks you to share one major event in your development of a literacy in a
detailed and engaging way. Remember that, for our purposes, literacy can encompass
many things - but it is something at which you have a certain skill.
• While this project asks you to share your story, you must also reflect on the importance of
the event to your current ability in the area you discuss. By doing so, you will be learning
more about genre and practicing different modes of composition, which are essential to our
course. Additionally, you will be practicing writing rhetorically with a specific purpose and
audience in mind.
• You MUST choose a literacy that will cross over to your first speech in Ms. Reiser's class -
so you must focus on a literacy that has something you can demonstrate to the class. For
example, if you write about baking as a literacy and focus on the impact it has had on your
life, you may choose to show the class how to frost cookies.
6. To Inform
• Yourself
• Your
audience
To Identify
• Your own
literacies
and their
significance
To Explore &
Show
• The reasons
it matters
• How it
works
8. Length
• 4-5 double spaced pages
Format
• Name and page # on each page
Submission
• Due to Canvas by 11:59pm on January 19th
Grading
• Rubric is on Canvas
9. Fantastic & Compelling
Introduction
Sets up a well-told story
as a situation that needs
to be resolved
Body Paragraphs
Use vivid detail to bring
the narrative to life (sight,
sounds, smell, etc)
Conclusion
Relays an indication of the
narrative’s significance
and gives a resolution
11. 1/10: Introduction to paper, brainstorming
1/11: Rhetorical situation and elements due at the beginning
of class
1/12: Outline due at 11:59pm on Canvas
1/16: First draft due at at 11:59pm on Canvas
1/18: Second Draft due in class, Peer Review Workshop
1/19: Final draft due on Canvas at 11:59pm.
12.
13. • What are some ways to brainstorm?
• What is it that you are brainstorming?
14. • Homework:
1. Read the entire prompt & rubric on Canvas
2. Brainstorm a list of your own literacies, and come up with at
least three different ways you could demonstrate this
literacy. Bring this to class tomorrow! You’ll be actively
working on writing your paper.