
Sensory Details in Narrative Writing
Presentation
•
English
•
7th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Medium
+3
Standards-aligned
Jessica Grande
Used 43+ times
FREE Resource
11 Slides • 4 Questions
1
Sensory Details in Narrative Writing
Objective: We will be able to incorporate sensory details into our Narrative Essay by including 3-5 details of sensory language.
Agenda:
DO NOW: Which sense can you live without?
Instructional Lesson: Sensory Details - Tapping into our Five Senses
Practice: How does this writer use our five senses in their writing?
Application: Incorporate 3-5 sensory details into your writing
2
Multiple Select
If you could live without one of your 5 senses, which would you choose?
5 senses:
Sight
Hearing/Sound
Taste
Touch
Smell
I could live without _________.
Sight
Hearing/Sound
Taste
Touch
Smell
3
Sensory Details: Tapping into our 5 senses
In order to experience the world fully, we use our five senses: sight, sound, touch, smell and taste.
You must use details to “paint a picture” of what is going on in the story. These are called Sensory details.
4
Sight and Sound/Hearing
For sight, you want to include details such as colors, shapes, appearances, size.
Words like: green, enormous, square, shiny - the shiny, green car
For sound, you want to include details such as loud or quiet sounds, as well as speech and how you hear someone speak
Words like: softly, roar, whisper, quietly, sharp, shout - dogs barking loudly
5
Smell, Taste and Touch
For smell, you want to include details that describe the quality of the smell
Words like: disgusting, musty, delicious, fresh, rotten - delicious bread baking in the oven
For taste, you want to include details that describe flavor
Words like: sour, sweet, burnt, spicy, warm, cold, juicy - a bag of salty chips
For touch, you want to include details of how something feels
Words like: soft, hard, solid, liquified, sharp, fuzzy, dry - I pet the soft, fuzzy bunny
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Let’s practice:
What does snow look like? What does snow feel like? What does snow taste like? What does snow sound like?
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Let's look at this example
We can compare snow to many different things using our five senses!
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Let's go back to "Eleven"
Using "Eleven" we want to notice some of the sensory details the author uses
We will identify which senses are being used to describe items in the story
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“It has to belong to somebody,”Mrs. Price keeps
saying, but nobody can remember. It’s an ugly sweater with
red plastic buttons and a collar and sleeves all stretched out
like you could use it for a jump rope. It’s maybe a thousand
years old and even if it belonged to me I wouldn’t say so.
Let's go back to "Eleven"
Using "Eleven" we want to notice some of the sensory details the author uses
10
Multiple Choice
Which one of these has the BEST sensory details about the sweater?
“It has to belong to somebody,”Mrs. Price keeps saying, but nobody can remember.
It’s an ugly sweater with
red plastic buttons and a collar and sleeves all stretched out
like you could use it for a jump rope.
She holds the red
sweater up in the air for all the class to see.
11
“Rachel,” Mrs. Price says. She says it like she’s getting
mad. “You put that sweater on right now and no more
nonsense.”
“But it’s not–“
“Now!” Mrs. Price says
This is when I wish I wasn’t eleven because all the years inside of me—ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, and one—are pushing at the back of my eyes when I put one arm through one sleeve of the sweater that smells like cottage cheese, and then the other arm through the other and stand there with my arms apart like if the sweater hurts me and it does, all itchy and full of germs that aren’t even mine.
12
Multiple Choice
Which one these contains sensory details about how the sweater smells?
I put one arm through one sleeve of the sweater that smells
like cottage cheese, and then the other arm through the other
I’ve shoved the red sweater to the tippy-tip corner of
my desk and it’s hanging all over the edge like a waterfall, but
I don’t care.
I open my eyes,
the red sweater’s still sitting there like a big red mountain.
13
Now, let's try to create sensory details on our own!
On the next slide, we will finish the sentence with a sensory detail.
For example, When I held the baby... its skin felt as soft as a blanket. (touch)
14
Open Ended
We walked outside to get some air and heard... (hearing/sound)
15
You do!
Using what you have learned about sensory details, go back into your narrative writing piece and read it over.
Find places in your story where you can incorporate (put in) 3-5 pieces of sensory details to describe to the reader what is going on. Please put these sensory details in bold.
What are the main characters seeing? Smelling? Tasting? Hearing? Feeling?
Sensory Details in Narrative Writing
Objective: We will be able to incorporate sensory details into our Narrative Essay by including 3-5 details of sensory language.
Agenda:
DO NOW: Which sense can you live without?
Instructional Lesson: Sensory Details - Tapping into our Five Senses
Practice: How does this writer use our five senses in their writing?
Application: Incorporate 3-5 sensory details into your writing
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