Literary Analysis
Narrative
Vocab
Editing
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100

What is Literary Analysis?

Literary Analysis is thinking deeply about a text and writing about your thoughts and ideas.

100

What is a text-based narrative?

A text-based narrative is a story you write based on a text you have read.

100

What is imagery and when do you use it?

Imagery is 5 senses descriptions that help the reader visualize your story.  Use it in narrative writing. 
100

When you finish writing, what do you need to do?

Reread and check your work for mistakes!

100

How many writing responses will you have to do on MCAS?

4! You will write at least 1 essay and 1 text-based narrative.

200
What are the 3 types of paragraphs in a literary analysis and how many of each do you write?

1 introduction, 2-3 body paragraphs, 1 conclusion

200

There are 3 types of text-based narratives.  Name or explain at least 1 type.

Continuation - write what happens next in the story

Point of View/Perspective - Write the same story from a different character's perspective

New Ending - change the ending of the story with a new purpose

200

What is evidence?  How much should you include?

Evidence is a quote from the text that illustrates your claim.  You need evidence in every body paragraph.  Each piece should be 1-3 sentences long.

200

What common mistakes should you check your work for when you finish?

Spelling

Capitalization

Organization

Punctuation

Errors

200

What should you do when you get to a writing response question on MCAS?

RAFT the prompt and figure out what you need to write about!

300

What do you include in a body paragraph?

Claim, evidence, and explanation

300

What do you need to include in your story to make it interesting?

You need to include a conflict!  Problems make the story fun to read!

300

What is the difference between a thesis statement and a claim? (Hint: think where it goes and what it says)

Thesis Statement - last sentence of your intro, previews all ideas of your essay

Claim - first sentence of a body paragraph, states one idea of your essay

300

How do you give the author credit for their words?

Citations! Write the author's last name and the paragraph/line number in parenthesis after the quote.

300

What should you do if the prompt says "Be sure to include information from both passages to develop your essay."

You should include a piece of evidence from both passages.

400

How do you hook a reader in your introduction?

Write a question connected to the topic of the essay.

400

How long should your text-based narrative be?

Your text-based narrative should have a clear beginning, middle, and end.  The length depends on what you are writing about.

400

What is the purpose of your explanation?

An explanation shares your thinking with the reader.  It is the longest and most important part of a body paragraph.  

400

Rewrite the following correctly: at night i waited for the bus stars shined in the sky above me

At night I waited for the bus. Stars shined in the sky above me.

400

How do you know if you need to write an essay or a narrative?

READ THE PROMPT!  It will say "write an essay" or "write a narrative"!!

500

What will you have to write essays about?

Anything!  Read the prompt carefully because essays can be written about characters/people, themes, explaining big ideas from the text, etc. 

500

How do you know who should narrate your text-based narrative?

Read the prompt!  It will either tell you to switch narrators or it will tell you to "use what you know about the characters, setting, and events in the passage to write your narrative" (stay the same as the passage).

500

What is the difference between a text-based narrative and an essay?

Text-based narrative - a story you write based on what you read

Essay - a 4-5 paragraph analysis of what you read

500

Rewrite the following evidence from paragraph 27 of Runt by Marion Dane Bauer correctly: Runt hardly knew the meaning of the words.  


"Runt hardly knew the meaning of the words" (Bauer 27). 

500

What do you do if you panic and don't know what to do?

STOP! Take a breath! Reread and RAFT the prompt and figure out which type of writing you're doing. Reread the passages to help you think about what you're going to write.  Plan on your scrap paper to help organize your ideas.