Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
original-327013-1 (introduction-blue-bottom-rings-word-written-over…
-
Rising Action
Series of events in order to build up the suspense. Description of the efforts made to resolve the conflict by characters.
Climax
Peak point of the story. Point of highest tension and drama, or it is the time when the action starts during which the solution is given. Solution starts to reveal at this turning point.
Conflict
Problem or issue on which story is based. On which story further progress in order to find out the attempts to resolve the issue and the results regarding the efforts
-
Beginning
Initializing Story, Describing Characters, Setting and Conflict. Brief Introduction about what's coming up next in the story
Denouement
The final part of a narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are explained or resolved. Consequence of the Conflict. It contains the moral or the purpose of the story.
W1 Articulate experience and express what is thought, felt and imagined
W2 Sequence facts, ideas and opinions
-
-
W5 Make accurate use of spelling, punctuation and grammar
-
Characters - The people who inhabit the story and move it forward. Typically, there are minor characters and main characters. The minor characters generally play supporting roles to the main character, or the protagonist.
Conflict - The primary problem or obstacle that unfolds in the plot that the protagonist must solve or overcome by the end of the narrative. The way in which the protagonist resolves the conflict of the plot results in the theme of the narrative.
Theme - The ultimate message the narrative is trying to express; it can be either explicit or implicit.
Setting - Both the time and geographic location within a narrative or within a work of fiction. Elements of setting may include culture, historical period, geography, and hour.
-
-
-
-
Is to influence the audience by expressing laughter, sympathy, anger, fear and so on through your words
-
-
Narratives can be either factual or fictional. In either case, narratives should emotionally engage the reader.
The four basic components to all narratives are plot, character, conflict, and theme.
-
-
A strong introduction is important to hook the reader. A strong conclusion should add resolution to the conflict and evoke the narrative’s theme.
Write a story which includes the sentence: ‘It suddenly became clear that they were not as lazy as
everyone said they were.’
-
-
-
Write a story which includes the words: ‘I never realised how useful that item of clothing
would be’.
Marking Scheme
Band 1 (30-27 marks)
• Highly accurate, apart from very occasional slips.
-
-
-
-
-
• Paragraphs have unity, are linked, and show evidence of planning.