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Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Dec 29, 2015

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Percival Henry
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Page 1: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Story Elements

Page 2: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

What do all stories have in common?

• Characters• Setting

• Conflict (problem)• Plot (events)

• Theme

Page 3: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Characters

• Characters are the people, animals, or objects who make the action happen in a story

• A story can have many characters, or just a few

Page 4: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Can you name the characters in these

stories?

• The Three Little Pigs• Cinderella• Spider-Man• Ratatouille• The Frog Prince

Page 5: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Setting

• The setting is the time and place of the story

Page 6: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Can you find the setting of this scene?

• Place• This picture is of a

beach• Time• It’s hard to tell the

time from this picture. We’d need more details to figure that out

Page 7: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Inferring setting

Anna sighed. She hated having to do so many chores. Her mother was always telling her to fetch the water from the well, watch her brothers and sisters, and fetch wood for the fire. “I wish that I could go to school,” she sighed, looking at her bare feet. But with her father in the Union Army, she had to help her mother.

Sometimes the author doesn’t come out and explain the setting. Can you make an inference with the paragraph below?

Page 8: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Inferring setting

Anna sighed. She hated having to do so many chores. Her mother was always telling her to fetch the water from the well, watch her brothers and sisters, and fetch wood for the fire. “I wish that I could go to school,” she sighed, looking at her bare feet. But with her father in the Union Army, she had to help her mother.

The clues tell us that this happens in the past. Can you guess the exact time period? There is a clue!

Page 9: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

What about fairy tales?

• With fantasy stories, it’s hard to tell a time and place

• Sometimes you can just say that a story happened in a “fantasy world” or in “fairy tale time”

Page 10: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Review

• What two story elements have we learned about so far?

• Character and setting• What are the two parts of setting?• Time and place

Page 11: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Conflict

•The conflict in a story is the problem

•Every story has to have a conflict

•The conflict is what drives the action in the story

Page 12: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Kinds of conflict

• Stories have different kinds of conflict. It’s not always just two people fighting!

Page 13: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Person versus person

• In this kind of conflict, two people have different ideas about what should happen

• Here is a playground. What kind of person versus person conflict could happen here?

Page 14: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Person versus self

• In this kind of conflict, the problem is inside the main character

• Suppose that you were hired to work on this ship and climb up into the rigging. What kind of internal conflict might you have?

Page 15: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Person versus environment

• In this kind of conflict, someone has to battle the environment, usually to survive

• Suppose you were stranded at this place. What would you need to survive?

Page 16: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Think about conflict!

• Think about a story that you have read lately. What was the conflict?

• Short stories often have just one conflict. Longer chapter books may have one main conflict, and several less important conflicts

Page 17: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Review

• The story element that includes the time and place of the story

• Setting• The people or animals who act in a

story• Characters• The problem in a story• Conflict

Page 18: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Plot

• The events of a story make up the plot

• In other words, the plot is what happens!

Page 19: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

The plot of a story follows a pattern

Climax

Falling Action

Rising Action

Exposition Resolution

Page 20: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Plot part: Exposition• The

exposition is the beginning of the story

• The author introduces the characters and the setting

Page 21: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Plot part: Rising action

• Things get more exciting with the rising action

• This is when the conflict is introduced

Page 22: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Plot part: Climax

• The climax is the turning point of the story

• It’s often the most exciting part

• Nothing will be the same again

Page 23: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Think about it!

• The plot of a story looks like a mountain. Why do you think the climax is at the top?

Page 24: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Plot part: Falling action

• The falling action is the part of the story that happens after the climax

• In some stories, this is a long part; in other stories, it happens quickly

Page 25: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Plot part: Resolution

• The resolution is the end of the story

• Everything is resolved and explained

Page 26: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Think about it!

• A story that ends at the climax is called a cliffhanger. Why do you think this is so?

climax

Page 27: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Theme

• The theme of a story is the underlying idea. It’s the big message, the big idea.

• The theme is the point of the story. Without a theme, a story doesn’t make much sense.

Page 28: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Some common themes

• You’ll often see the same themes pop up again and again.

Good will triumph over evil

Honesty is the best policy

Page 29: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

More themesFriendship is more important than popularity

Hold onto dreams, because they might come true

Slow and steady wins the race

Hard work will pay off in the end

Can you think of stories or movies that show these themes?

Page 30: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

Review

• What is the plot of a story?– The events

• Which part of the plot is the most exciting?– The climax

• What is the main idea or message of a story?– The theme

Page 31: Story Elements. What do all stories have in common? Characters Setting Conflict (problem) Plot (events) Theme.

What have you learned about story elements?

• What have you learned about story elements? Share your ideas with a partner.