
Introduction to Personal Narrative
Presentation
•
English
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7th - 8th Grade
•
Practice Problem
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Hard
Sara Jones
Used 47+ times
FREE Resource
13 Slides • 0 Questions
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Introduction to personal narratives
Nonfiction Narrative Writing
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Personal Narratives...
-are based on real-life (true) personal experiences that have significant meaning for the writer.
-may have resulted in the writer learning a lesson or gaining insight about themselves, others, life, etc.
-are told by the narrator to describe the personal experience.
-are written in the first-person (“I”) point of view.
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A good personal narrative will have these pieces:
Narrow, Clearly Defined Focus
Character Descriptions
Dialogue
Setting Description
Interesting Details
Logical Sequence
Strong Conclusion
Purposeful and Precise Word Choice
Varied Sentence Structure
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Narrow, Clearly Defined Focus
This means the writer focuses on a central idea based on a significant event.
A personal narrative is about a moment or single event in the author's life—not their entire life story.
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Dialogue
Including some dialogue in a personal narrative helps to make the characters and the experience more vivid.
Dialogue keeps the narrative flowing and can reveal something about the characters.
Dialogue should be interesting and not overused.
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Character Descriptions
Personal narratives describe the characters involved in the writer’s personal experience.
The characters are developed through interesting details that describe their appearance, actions, and words.
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Setting Description
Personal narratives also describe the setting (where and when the event or experience happened).
Sensory details can be used to describe the setting to bring the experience to life. For example, what does the writer smell, see, hear, taste, or feel?
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Strong introduction
In a personal narrative, the introduction...
-establishes the setting, introduces the people involved, and sets the tone of the narrative
-includes a hook to get the reader interested
foreshadowing (a hint of something to come)
--action
--dialogue
-a sound (onomatopoeia)
imagery (description of setting or characters)
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Interesting Details
Details can...
-appeal to the senses
-describe what is happening instead of just telling the facts or listing the actions
-provide a clear understanding of why an experience is meaningful
-describe the narrator's emotions at the time of the experience
-help the reader visualize what is happening in the story
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Logical Sequence
Personal narratives typically include an introduction, a plot, characters, a setting, a climax, resoution, and a conclusion. The resolution usually results in personal growth for the author.
The events described should give the reader insight as to why the experience was meaningful for the author.
Relevant transitions and strong sentence-to-sentence connections enhance the logical movement of the narrative. In other words, transitions connect events and move the reader smoothly through the story.
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Strong Conclusion
Conclusions should...
-leave readers with a lasting impression of the personal experience
-give readers a sense of closure and completion
-show the author’s personal growth
and/or emphasize the importance of the event
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Purposeful and Precise Word Choice
During the revision process, writers evaluate their words and change them as needed.
For example, they might:
-replace overused words with stronger, more powerful ones (action verbs, adjectives, and adverbs)
-insert phrases and figurative language (e.g., similes, metaphors) that describe, explain, or provide additional detail and connections
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Varied Sentence Structure
Use a variety of sentence patterns by:
-combining short sentences with prepositional and appositive phrases
-combining short sentences by linking with a coordinating or subordinating conjunction
-varying sentence beginnings
--beginning with an adverb
--beginning with an introductory clause
-breaking up long, rambling sentences (often run-on sentences) into two or three shorter sentences
Introduction to personal narratives
Nonfiction Narrative Writing
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