Narrative writing
A story with a conflict and a
resolution
Seven Tips
Write on one experience with a conflict
• Ask the 5 W how questions:
Who( characters)
What happened (plot)
Where (setting)
How (plot progression and details)
• Use lots of dialogue
Tips continued
• Use sensory details
• Make sure you have a climax
• Make sure there is a resolution to the
story
Step One
• Choose a memory, and bring it to life by
recalling the details
• Imagine the story in your mind
• Organize the plot line and main events on
an outline
Step Two
• What did you hear, see, feel and
experience and can write about?
• Add your details to your outline
Five Ways to start writing the
narrative
• Start with a description
• Start with a question
• Start with an anecdote
• Start with a quotation
• Start with dialogue
Things to think about while you are
writing
• Stories can make you laugh and can make you
cry
• The essential elements are to have three key
events
• Select good narrative details that add to the
story
• Use description in your narrative writing
• Use dialogue for a purpose
• Establish a point of view ( who is telling the
story?)
Ideas to write on:
• A time when you were a child and learned a
lesson in life
• Patience
• Self control
• Lack of anger
• Sharing
• Forgiving
• Not lying about something
• Not taking someone else’s things
Ideas
• A time when you were afraid and it worked
out
• A time when you made a big mistake and
how it worked out
• A time when life was tough and yet in time
you got over it
Next Step
• Start with writing your lead in your
introduction
• Next, add the who, what, when where into
your essay.
• Define in a few sentences where this story
is happening and who is in it.
• Draw us into the story
What are leads?
• In your introduction you can start with a
lead such as dialogue, feelings,
experiences, backflashes, anecdotes,
questions, or statements
While you are writing
• Add your details
• Details are:
• Anecdotes, incidents, similes, metaphors,
comparisons, adjectives, adverbs,
experiences, examples, dialogue, feelings,
etc.
Paragraphs 2,3,4
• These paragraphs are called the body
paragraphs.
• Each paragraph is building the story to a
climax
• The climax should be starting in paragraph
3, but really comes to fruition in paragraph
four.
• The climax is the highest and most
exciting point in the story.
Paragraph 5
• This is the resolution to the story. Your
story needs to be resolved in paragraph 5,
and a conclusion needs to happen. Add
clincher sentences and make the ending
believable. Don’t always wake up from a
dream!

Narrative writing.presentation.englishppt

  • 1.
    Narrative writing A storywith a conflict and a resolution
  • 2.
    Seven Tips Write onone experience with a conflict • Ask the 5 W how questions: Who( characters) What happened (plot) Where (setting) How (plot progression and details) • Use lots of dialogue
  • 3.
    Tips continued • Usesensory details • Make sure you have a climax • Make sure there is a resolution to the story
  • 4.
    Step One • Choosea memory, and bring it to life by recalling the details • Imagine the story in your mind • Organize the plot line and main events on an outline
  • 5.
    Step Two • Whatdid you hear, see, feel and experience and can write about? • Add your details to your outline
  • 6.
    Five Ways tostart writing the narrative • Start with a description • Start with a question • Start with an anecdote • Start with a quotation • Start with dialogue
  • 7.
    Things to thinkabout while you are writing • Stories can make you laugh and can make you cry • The essential elements are to have three key events • Select good narrative details that add to the story • Use description in your narrative writing • Use dialogue for a purpose • Establish a point of view ( who is telling the story?)
  • 8.
    Ideas to writeon: • A time when you were a child and learned a lesson in life • Patience • Self control • Lack of anger • Sharing • Forgiving • Not lying about something • Not taking someone else’s things
  • 9.
    Ideas • A timewhen you were afraid and it worked out • A time when you made a big mistake and how it worked out • A time when life was tough and yet in time you got over it
  • 10.
    Next Step • Startwith writing your lead in your introduction • Next, add the who, what, when where into your essay. • Define in a few sentences where this story is happening and who is in it. • Draw us into the story
  • 11.
    What are leads? •In your introduction you can start with a lead such as dialogue, feelings, experiences, backflashes, anecdotes, questions, or statements
  • 12.
    While you arewriting • Add your details • Details are: • Anecdotes, incidents, similes, metaphors, comparisons, adjectives, adverbs, experiences, examples, dialogue, feelings, etc.
  • 13.
    Paragraphs 2,3,4 • Theseparagraphs are called the body paragraphs. • Each paragraph is building the story to a climax • The climax should be starting in paragraph 3, but really comes to fruition in paragraph four. • The climax is the highest and most exciting point in the story.
  • 14.
    Paragraph 5 • Thisis the resolution to the story. Your story needs to be resolved in paragraph 5, and a conclusion needs to happen. Add clincher sentences and make the ending believable. Don’t always wake up from a dream!