Writing Workshop: Narrative Essay
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Transcript of Writing Workshop: Narrative Essay
Writing Workshop : Narrative Essay
ENG 101: Writing IPages from The Writing Process by John Lannon
The Thesis Statement
Step 1pp. 22-27
Thesis Statement
• Because everything you say in your essay must be logically related to your thesis, the thesis controls and directs the choices you make about the content of your essay.
• As your essay develops, so should your thesis. Don’t be afraid to modify your thesis to accommodate your changing essay.
3 Steps to developing a thesis
1. Determine a question that you are trying to answer in your essay.– Your 1-2 sentence response will create a tentative
thesis.2. Reword your thesis again by beginning with “What
I want to say is that…”– Later, when you delete the cheesy opening, you will be
left with a decent thesis statement.3. Add the three main points that you want to make
about your topic.
Sample Beginning Thesis StatementsEach sentence below identifies the topic and makes an assertion about it.
• One of the most potent elements in body language is eye behavior
• Americans can be divided into three groups—smokers, nonsmokers, and that expanding pack of us who have quit.
• Over the past ten to fifteen years, it has become apparent that eating disorders have reached epidemic proportions among adolescents.
Outlining
Step 2
Utilize the outline form
• Create your topic sentences• Add supporting evidence to each paragraph• Add detail to each piece of supporting
evidence• Design intro and conclusion
Include detail in your body paragraphs
• Each detail should help create a picture for the reader.– “In the winter she sewed night after night,
endlessly, begging cast-off clothing from relatives, ripping apart coats, dresses, blouses and trousers to remake them to fit her four daughters and son.”
Body Paragraphs
Step 3pg. 54, 97-105
TAKE A LOOK AT PP. 98-103Which type of paragraph order works best for your essay?
How to structure the essay
• Different aspects of the experience• Results of the experience• Steps taken throughout the experience• Different lessons learned because of the
experience• Examples building an understanding of the
experience• Etc.
Detail
Step 4
Adding vivid descriptions
• It’s good to have personal examples within each paragraph to help illustrate your main point within that paragraph.
• Readers want to see and hear and feel events; you present an accurate picture of each event.
Organization
Step 5pp. 136, 120-121
Maintain Clear Verb Tense
• Do not use unnecessary tense shifts.• If you shift from past to present, do so
intentionally and to create a specific effect.• You can organize the essay in chronological order.• You can move from general information to being
more specific or least important to most important.
• Space order: Ex. When describing a house, describe from outside to inside or bottom to top.
Transitions
Step 6pg. 106
Intro and Conclusion
• View pp. 51-53– Which type of introduction works best for your
essay?• View pp. 54-55– Which type of conclusion works best for your
essay?
Types of Introductions• Anecdote: Brief narrative drawn from current events, history, or
your personal experience• Analogy and Comparison: Gets readers to connect to a topic they
might otherwise be unfamiliar with• Dialogue/Quotation: Must be relevant, but can illustrate a
particular attitude about your topic• Facts and Statistics: this is mostly for argumentative essays• Irony or Humor: this signals to the reader that the essay is going to
be entertaining and may contain some unexpected illustrations• Short Generalization: Basically background information about your
topic• Startling Claim: should be factual and unsettling• Strong Proposition: mostly for persuasive essays• Rhetorical Question: effective if applied directly to the topic
Intros to Avoid• Apology
– “I am a high school student and do not consider myself an expert on essay writing, but I’m going to try this anyway.”
• Complaint– “I’d rather write about a topic of my own choice than the that is
assigned, but here it goes.”• Webster’s Dictionary
– “Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary defines perseverance as…”• Platitude: a trite, meaningless, biased, or prosaic statement, often
presented as if it were significant and original.– “America is the land of opportunity, and no one knows that better than
Martha Stewart.”• Reference to Title
– “As you can see from my title, this essay is about why I can contribute to your university.”
Conclusions
Varying Sentence Structure and Length
• Having no variety to your sentence structure makes for a boring read, even for the most interesting of topics.
• Utilize the structure handout to determine what you need to do with your sentences within each paragraph.