Story Elements
Delivery Skills
Writing Craft
Speech Scenarios (what would you do)
Story Detective
100

This part of the story tells WHERE and WHEN your story happens.

Settings

100

This means looking at your audience, not at the floor or ceiling.

Eye Contact

100

I could SMELL the fresh cookies baking" is an example of using this.

Descriptive Language (sensory details)

100

You're presenting and forget what comes next. What should you do?

Pause, take a breath, and remember your story (or glance at notes

100

In the haircut story, what was the problem?

the boy got a bad haircut from his cousin (or didn't listen to his mom)

200

These are the people in your story, including YOU as the main character.

Characters

200

Speaking loud enough so everyone can hear you is called this.

Projection (volume)

200

Instead of saying "I was sad," you say "Tears filled my eyes." This is called _____ not telling.

Showing (describing)

200

Your voice is getting quieter as you speak. What do you need to fix?

Speak louder/project more

200

Why do we tell stories about times things went wrong instead of times everything was perfect?

They're more interesting/we learn from mistakes/people can relate

300

This is the part where something goes wrong or gets challenging.

Problem

300

Using your hands and arms to show what you're talking about.

Gestures

300

Words like "suddenly," "but then," and "after that" help you do this in your story.

Transitions (connections between parts)

300

You notice the audience looks confused. What part of your speech might be missing?

Details or transitions (or clear explanation)

300

If your story takes place at school during lunch, name one sensory detail you could include.

Any: smell of food, sound of talking/trays, sight of cafeteria, taste of lunch, feel of table)

400

This is what you learned or the lesson from your story.

Moral

400

This is when you stop speaking for 1-2-3 counts to let something important sink in.

Pause

400

The most exciting part of your story where the problem is biggest is called this.

Climax (rising actions) 

400

You're speaking too fast and running out of breath. What technique helps?

Slow down/add pauses/breathe

400

Your friend's story has setting, characters, and problem, but no solution. What advice would you give?

Tell how the problem got fixed/what happened to make it better

500

Name all 5 elements of a narrative speech in order.

Setting, characters, problem, solution, and mora

500

Name 3 things you should do with your body while presenting.

Stand still, make eye contact, use gestures (or any 3 delivery skills

500

Give an example of a sentence using a metaphor to describe something.

any creative comparison or direct comparison (using "like" or "as" ok)

500

Name 2 things you can do before presenting to calm your nerves.

Take deep breaths, practice, stretch, think positive thoughts (accept any 2 reasonable answers)

500

DAILY DOUBLE! Explain why the moral is the most important part of a narrative speech.

It shows what you learned/helps the audience understand why the story matters/teaches others something