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Warm up # 5

Warm up # 5. TONE QUIZ READ THE PASSAGE AND THEN ANSWER THE QUESTIONS. . TPO # 5. WE WILL INTRODUCE THE 6 PARTS OF A PLOT CONCENTRATING ON THE EXPOSITION TO INCLUDE THE CHARACTERS, SETTING , SITUATION AND NARRATIVE HOOK. WE WILL APPLY OUR PRIOR KNOWLEDGE OF TONE,MOOD, AND DICTION. . Setting.

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Warm up # 5

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  1. Warm up # 5 TONE QUIZ READ THE PASSAGE AND THEN ANSWER THE QUESTIONS.

  2. TPO # 5 • WE WILL INTRODUCE THE 6 PARTS OF A PLOT CONCENTRATING ON THE EXPOSITION TO INCLUDE THE CHARACTERS, SETTING , SITUATION AND NARRATIVE HOOK. WE WILL APPLY OUR PRIOR KNOWLEDGE OF TONE,MOOD, AND DICTION.

  3. Setting If you could talk about the where and when of a story, what you’re really talking about is the story’s setting. Understanding a story’s setting can give you a context for the events of the plot. It can also give you clues about the mood, or atmosphere, of a story.

  4. CHARACTER: A character is a person, an animal, or an imaginary creature that takes part in the action of a story. Sometimes the author will directly describe a character’s appearance, personality, or feelings ( Direct characterization). Other times the author will leave clues and expect you to draw conclusions about what the person or animal is like. ( indirect characterization)

  5. CHARACTERIZATION: An author can give information about a character by describing several aspects of the character: • Physical appearance and personality • Speech, behavior, and actions • Thoughts and feelings • Interactions with other characters

  6. CHARACTER TYPES: Most stories have both main and minor characters. The main character, or protagonist, is the most important character. The action of the plot revolves around him or her. Often the antagonist, the person or thing working against the protagonist, is also a main character.

  7. Plot • PLOT: Plot is the action of a story. It is the series of related events that the author describes from the beginning of the story to the end. Most plots follow a chronological order. In other words, they proceed in the order in which the events happen.

  8. Point of View • First-person Point of View: in the first-person point of view, the story is told by one of the characters. The character uses pronouns such as I or we and usually participates in much of the action. • Third-person Point of View: in the third-person point of view, the story is told by a narrator who is not a character in the story. (Pronouns such as she, he, and they are used when writing in third-person point of view)

  9. 6 Parts of a Plot • Exposition: setting , introduction to characters, mood, situation • Narrative hook • Rising action • Climax climax • Falling action falling action • Resolution rising action resolution Exposition narrative hook

  10. The Exposition • Everyone will get a playing card. You will partner up with someone that has the same number or face card as you. There can not be more than 2 in a group. You will then make up a story given the information on the overhead. In your story, it can not go past the narrative hook part of the plot. The story must be heavy on characterization, setting, and the situation.

  11. 6 parts a plot • 2/6/K/A- an old lady, in a secret lab , youth potion • 3/7/Q- secret agents, at a plane crash site, looking for a vial • 4/8/9- a teenage girl that is 75, in an old apartment, crying • 5/J/10- A scientist, a dying mother, in the jungles of the Amazon, extracting tree sap

  12. Adding on • Now switch with another group and work your story line into theirs making sure to add as much as your original story as possible and following their pt of view.

  13. SITCOM’S PLOT • WATCH A SITCOM AND PLOT ALL OF THE 6 PARTS OF A PLOT IN ORDER. MAKE SURE TO GIVE ENOUGH INFORMATION TO COVER ALL OF THE PARTS BELOW. • SETTING • CHARACTERS ( DESCRIBE THEM) WHO ARE THE MAIN CHARACTERS? WHO ARE SOME MINOR CHARACTERS? • SITUATION • NARRATIVE HOOK • RISING ACTIONS ( LIST MORE THAN ONE) • CLIMAX • FALLING ACTION • RESOLUTION

  14. TPO # 6 • WE WILL APPLY OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE EXPOSITION OF A PLOT TO DIFFERENT MEDIUMS IN ORDER TO DETERMINE OUR COMPREHENSION OF THE LIT. ELEMENT

  15. Table of Contents: English Folder • Section 1: Warm up / TPO • Warm up 2 / TPO 2 • Warm up 3 / TPO 3 • Warm up 4 / TPO 4 • Warm up 5/ TPO 5 • Section 2: Literature • Tone tune 1 • Notes: • Tone/mood • Author’s purpose • Characterization,setting,plot • Elements chart chapters 1-2 of the novel • Section 3: Writing • Section 4: Grammar / Vocabulary

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