Keiser University Childhood Family Experience Narrative Essay Outline

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Humanities

Keiser University

Description

Learning Objectives: Compose, define, describe and organize elements of a narrative.

In preparation for your Narrative Essay (due Week Two), you will begin the writing process by exploring an idea (pre-writing), focusing the idea on a single event, creating an outline, and drafting the introduction paragraph.

For topics, p. 88, and for planning the narrative (recommended reading) see pp. 89-93, Norton Field Guide to Writing with Readings.

Complete all three tasks

  1. Read pp,331 - 339 and choose one of the following pre-writing activities: Free writing, Listing, Clustering, Cubing or Questioning. If you choose to handwrite your activity, take a photograph with your phone and attach it along with your submission.
  2. Create an Outline (Follow graphic below) It should be one sentence for each step.
  3. Compose an introductory paragraph and highlight or underline the main idea

**The narrative essay will be only 600 words long (Week 2), so be sure your story if focused on a short, particular period of time to allow for effective use of sensory details and vivid descriptions.**

**Please submit a SINGLE document for the outline and introduction part of assignment. If you attach a separate prewriting activity, there should be a maximum of TWO (2) attachments. The prewriting activity can be in any format (i.e., typed or a picture of a handwritten piece); however, the outline you create must be a Word (typed) document. Prewriting activity is required for full credit.

Choose one of the following topics:

  • What personal goal or achievement are you most proud of? Share the story of the moment you reached that goal.
  • What one event brought you closer to your family? Describe that day.
  • Was there an event in your life where you made a mistake or misjudged a situation? Describe how the event occurred and what you learned from it.
  • You may also choose one of the topics on pages 84 - 85 in the Norton Field Guide to Writing with Readings.

Background:

A narrative should share a larger lesson with the audience beyond simply retelling an event. A strong narrative focuses on a single event or conflict and builds from introduction to body to a resolution. Descriptive language brings the reader into the experience; consider carefully how you describe each scene. Show—don’t tell. Telling informs the reader by stating facts. “She was angry.” Show describes a scene. “She grabbed the wilted flowers and threw them in his face.” Telling repeats a list or series of actions, often without stopping to describe what happened. Showing shares concrete sensory details to capture the scene in which the event takes place.

To submit your assignment, click on the title Week 1 Assignment: Narrative Outline and Worksheet.

Narrative Worksheet; Week One

In preparation for your Narrative Essay (due Week Two), choose one of the Writing Suggestions and complete the following tasks:
⦁ Read pp. 331-339 and choose one of the following pre-writing activities: Free writing, Listing, Clustering, Cubing or Questioning. If you choose to handwrite your activity, take a photograph with your phone and attach it along with your submission.
⦁ Create an Outline (Follow graphic below) It should be one sentence for each step.
⦁ Compose an introductory paragraph and highlight or underline the main idea
Choose one of the following topics:
⦁ What personal goal or achievement are you most proud of? Share the story of the moment you reached that goal.
⦁ What one event brought you closer to your family? Describe that day.
⦁ Was there an event in your life where you made a mistake or misjudged a situation? Describe how the event occurred and what you learned from it.
Background
A narrative should share a larger lesson with the audience beyond simply retelling an event. A strong narrative focuses on a single event or conflict and builds from introduction to body to a resolution. Descriptive language brings the reader into the experience; consider carefully how you describe each scene. Show—don’t tell. Telling informs the reader by stating facts. “She was angry.” Show describes a scene. “She grabbed the wilted flowers and threw them in his face.” Telling repeats a list or series of actions, often without stopping to describe what happened. Showing shares concrete sensory details to capture the scene in which the event takes place.
Literacy Narratives pages 88 - 93
Generating Ideas and Text, pages 331-339
Learning Objectives: Compose, define, describe and organize elements of a narrative.

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Explanation & Answer

Here it is.

Running head: NARRATIVE ESSAY

1

Narrative Essay
Student’s Name
Institutional Affiliation

NARRATIVE ESSAY

2

Narrative Essay Outline
1. Introduction
Attention getter: Each time I feel like I am having it hard, I take solace in the
fact that I have seen my sister going through hell and coming out on the other side
strong and full of life.
Build-up: I was pretty young when I overheard my mother and sister arguing. My
mother was frantic, sobbing and telling my sister how much of a disappointment
she was. She kept on swearing that my father would kill them both. To hear such
extreme words shook and overwhelmed me.
Thesis statement: I was convinced that whatever was transpiring was the end of
my family.
2. Body paragraph 1.
Rising action: When I finally composed myself, I left my room and went into the
living room, where the altercation was happening. My sister had buried her face
in a seat pillow while my mother was pacing around the room, clearly very
nervous. Before I could put a word in to ask what the root of the chaos was, the
doorbell rang. I dashed over to the door and opened it. My father met me with a
huge smile and a loving embrace as he entered the house. Upon walking into the
living room, his jovial mood quickly changed. He read the room and noticed that
something was amiss. My mother turned to my helpless sister and asked her to tell
my father what she had done. Tiffany, my sister, started...


Anonymous
I was having a hard time with this subject, and this was a great help.

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