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Explore the central ideas and themes hidden within stories, as revealed through characters' experiences. Discover how conflict and the title can provide clues, and understand the different points of view used by narrators. Learn to infer and draw conclusions from the text, and uncover the deeper implications and insights about life and human behavior.
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Story Elements Theme Setting Point of View Inference Draw Conclusions
Theme • The central idea, or insight, about life or human behavior that a story reveals • In most stories, the theme is not stated directly. Instead, it is revealed to us through the characters’ experiences.
Subject VS Theme Subject Theme simply the topic can be stated in a single word, such as loyalty. makes some surprise about the subject and should be expressed in a sentence: “Loyalty to a leader is not always noble.”
Ways to find THEME • Writers often express theme through what their characters learn. • Conflict helps reveal theme. • Sometimes the title gives clues.
Setting • Time and place of a story
Point of View • Is determined by the narrator (the person telling the story). • Narrator may be the author or a character.
Point Of View • First Person Point of View- narrator tells the story based on how he/she thinks and feels • Second Person Point of View- narrator speaks to you throughout the story • Third Person Point of View- narrator is not a character in the story and describes the characters and plot without being in the action. • Third Person Omniscient-(all knowing) narrator sees and hears everything about all characters and plot • Third Person Limited-narrator only tells you about what is going on inside the head of one character
Inference • Adecision reached on the basis of evidence in the reading and your own background knowledge. • IS an educated guess about the text. • IS “reading between the lines.” • Is NOT directly stated in the text youare reading.
Infer VS Imply Inference Implication (suggestion) You the reader infer when you make an educated guess. The author/character implies,
Drawing Conclusions • a decision or judgment based on the information the writer gives and on what they know from their own experiences. • We use our observations as well as what we already know to draw conclusions.
Drawing Conclusions • Authors don’t usually tell readers what to think about a story’s facts and details. • Authors may give you a few details about what happens in the story or about the characters.