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1 Clockwork • Listen to the song that is playing. • Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. • In your writer’s notebook, describe the scene you envision as the song plays in the background. Be very descriptive in your writing using vivid verbs, details, and images. 1
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1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Dec 26, 2015

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Audra Bryant
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Page 1: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

1

Clockwork

• Listen to the song that is playing.• Imagine the music as background to a

narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot.

• In your writer’s notebook, describe the scene you envision as the song plays in the background. Be very descriptive in your writing using vivid verbs, details, and images. 1

Page 2: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Literary Elements

Plot Point of View Mood

Setting Foreshadowing Characters

Flashback Conflict Theme

Irony Motivation Suspense

Symbol

Page 3: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Plot(Once upon a time…)

Exposition: sets up the story by telling background, setting, & characters

Rising Action: main part of the story where problems arise

Climax: point of greatest intensity; the turning point

Plot: The sequence of events that take place in a story.

Page 4: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Falling Action: contains dialogue & action that lead to a satisfying ending

Resolution: satisfying ending telling how problems are resolved

…and they lived happily ever after.

Plot

Page 5: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Plot Line

Exposition

Rising

Act

ion

Climax

Falling Action

Resolution

Page 6: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

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Think-Pair-Share

• Think about the narrative you envisioned during the opening song.

• In your writer’s notebook, label what you have written according to a plot diagram: exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution

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Page 7: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Setting

Time & Place

(It was a dark and scary night….)

Page 8: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

CharacterizationAuthors present believable characters by:

•character’s actions & words

•character’s appearance

•character’s inner thoughts

•character’s background

•what other characters think & say about the character

•narrator commenting directly about a character

Page 9: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

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Teach - Okay

• 1’s -- teach 2’s about characterization!

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Page 10: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

CharacterMotivation

The reason a character behaves

in a certain way

Page 11: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

CharacterMotivation

The reason a character behaves

in a certain way

Page 12: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

é The struggle that takes place between two opposing forces.

Conflict!

EXTERNAL:

(outside the character)

★person versus person

★person versus nature

★person versus society

INTERNAL:

(within the character’s mind)

★person versus self

Page 13: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Point of ViewWhois telling the story?★1st person: a character speaks directly to the reader & refers to him/herself as “I” --this allows readers to experience the thoughts and emotions of the main character★3rd person: a narrator who is not a character & refers to all characters as “he” or “she”--this allows readers to experience the thoughts and emotions of several characters

Page 14: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

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Teach - Okay

• 2’s -- Teach 1’s about point-of-view

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Page 15: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

SuspenseWhatwill happennext?

The author’s ability to make the reader uncertain or tense about what is to

happen next.

I can’t stand the suspense!

Page 16: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

MoodWhat emotion is this writing trying

to make me feel?

The atmosphere or feeling that runs

through a work of literature. Writers

create mood usually through their choice

of details & description

Page 17: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

ForeshadowingThe use of clues or hints by the author to prepare the reader forfuture developments in a story

Foreshadowing helps us make predictions…and then we want to read on to see if our

predictions come true!

Page 18: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Flashback

An interruption of the action in a story to

tell about something

that happened earlier in

time.

FLASH BACK

Story’s Plot Story’s Plot

Page 19: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Central Idea & Theme

Central Idea is the universal life subject found in a work of literature (friendship, fear, love, determination, etc.)

Theme is the life lesson learned from the Central Idea, stated in sentence form.

What can I learn about

how to live my life?

What is the author trying to tell

us? What is his message?

Page 20: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

IronyA contrast between what is stated and what is really meant, or between what is expected to happen and what actually does happen.

Page 21: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Protagonist:The central or main character in a story.

Antagonist:Works versus the protagonist.

Page 22: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

Symbol

Any person, place, or thing which has meaning in itself but which is made to

represent, or stand for, something else as well.

Page 23: 1 Clockwork Listen to the song that is playing. Imagine the music as background to a narrative that has a setting, characters, and plot. In your writer’s.

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Exit Slip

• If your computer number is 1-8, describe one way in which the setting of a story might affect the characters.

• If your computer number is 9-16, describe one way in which the characters of a story might affect the plot events.

• If your computer number is 17-25, describe one way in which the setting of a story might affect the conflict of a story.

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