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Write For Your Life

Write For Your Life. Module Two Narrative Writing: Fun with Characterization. Module Overview. This module is designed to: 1.) Use pop culture television characters as a way of exploring traditional narrative writing and character development.

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Write For Your Life

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  1. Write For Your Life Module Two Narrative Writing: Fun with Characterization

  2. Module Overview • This module is designed to: 1.) Use pop culture television characters as a way of exploring traditional narrative writing and character development. 2.) Critically reflect upon your own skills and talents as a narrative writer. 3.) Discover how you can apply current technology to teaching narrative writing with your future students.

  3. Quick Write What is your favorite character or story? Why is this story or character so interesting to you?

  4. FOCUS LESSON:TYPES OF NARRATIVES • A narrative is a story with characters and there is a definite plot line. A narrative normally has a beginning, a middle and an end. • There are two types of narrative – fiction and non fiction

  5. FICTIONAL NARRATIVE • This includes novels, plays, short stories and mini sagas. • In each instance the focus of the writing is what the writer’s imagination has created, the world and the situations and the characters he/she has conceived of and written about. • Scripts (film, TV and radio) also belong in the fiction narrative category. They are so different though in presentation and the demands they make on the writer, that they have their own section.

  6. NON-FICTION NARRATIVE • This includes personal narratives (i.e. Real life stories about yourself or someone else), bibliographies and autobiographies, as well as feature stories in magazines and newspapers, and travelarticles.

  7. What do you know about these characters? • List everything you know about the character or the book.

  8. CHARACTERSIt is impossible to have a successful story without characters • Here is an example of how central characters are. Trev has a disgusting habit. He collects cockroaches. He calls them his ‘Pet Dinosaurs’ and he loves them. He stores them in little plastic bottles and feeds them food scraps. Now that wouldn’t be a problem, except for one thing – Trev doesn’t do this in the safety of his own home – he does it at school. One day, when……

  9. Character development • Your characters must look and sound ‘real’ or credible. • Characters should move a story along – they need to have a specific role. • Interactions between characters should be believable. • There needs to be a purpose to any character traits given .

  10. Writing Time!

  11. TRY THIS… MOTIVATION IS WHAT DRIVES A CHARACTER TO ACT THE WAYS HE /SHE DOES. Choose 2 of the characters and give them names. Draw up a comprehensive list of the sorts of things that could motivate such a character eg…. …JEALOUSY, FEAR, A PAINFUL PAST, GREED, HUNGER, A QUEST, POWER…etc. Select one of those motives for each character and write a brief outline of the sorts of actions and responses which might be a result of that motive.

  12. ….NOW THIS… • Choose one of the following ‘PLOT STARTERS’ and organize a series of events and character interaction/response suitable to the plot. • This is story-boarding – arranging a PLOT into SCENES He sat there,….

  13. Character Sketch • Choose a character. Make a picture of the character. Come up with 5-6 words to describe the character. • If you’re having trouble use the “Character Sketch Template”.

  14. Share Time • Tweet a series of clues about your favorite TV character. (Ex. I am bilingual, I have a pet monkey…who am I??…Dora the Explorer) • Post your “character sketch” on your blog, have your peers ask your character a series of interview questions. • Find four Youtube links related to your character. Post them to your blog.

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