Use the circle diagram (looks like a wheel) to take notes on today.

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Presentation transcript:

Use the circle diagram (looks like a wheel) to take notes on today. Point of View “Wheel” Use the circle diagram (looks like a wheel) to take notes on today.

Points of View Third Person Third Person Limited Third Person Omniscient Second Person Points of View Third Person Limited First Person Objective Subjective

Pronoun Clues: Write the pronoun clues inside the portion where you wrote each name: First Person: Pronoun clues = “I”, “me”, “mine”, “my”, “we”, “us” Second Person: Pronoun clues = “You”, “Your”, “Yourself” Third Person: Pronoun clues = “He”, “She”, “They”, “Them”

Points of View: Definitions Write the definitions in the outer rim. First Person: Narrator takes part in the story. Author is telling about something personal that has happened to him/her. Second Person: The “you” tense not often used by fiction writers. Used in directions Third Person: Narrator is not part of the story. The action is seen through the eyes of a single character. .

Points of View: Definitions Third Person Limited: Author tells the story from the viewpoint of one character. Tells what this character sees, hears, thinks, and feels. Omniscient: All-knowing/God-like narrator. knows everything about ALL of the characters and events in the story.

Points of View: Definitions Limited Omniscient: All-knowing narrator about one or two characters, but NOT everything and everybody Objective: Narrator is unnamed and/or unidentified. Reports on events and lets the reader supply the meaning. Subjective: Takes on the mindset of one (or more characters). Shares opinions or makes judgments

Decorating… When you have finished labeling all parts of the wheel, neatly color it (anyway you’d like) Then, cut it out and glue it into your notebook. Title the page “Point of View Notes” and update your table of contents