Agenda Bell Ringer: Writing Intros and Character Development – 20ish minutes Notes & Practice over Using & Punctuating Dialogue Advanced: Read I Am Malala.

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Presentation transcript:

Agenda Bell Ringer: Writing Intros and Character Development – 20ish minutes Notes & Practice over Using & Punctuating Dialogue Advanced: Read I Am Malala “Prologue: The Day my World Changed” General: Read Persepolis pages 47-71 Formative Assessment Dialogue Analysis Develop 2 possible conversations for your narrative Advanced: Read Persepolis pages 72-93 for homework

Using Dialogue to Develop Characters and Plot W.11-12.3B: I can include dialogue in my writing to develop the experiences, events, and characters in the text.

What is Dialogue? Dialogue is a spoken exchange between characters in a dramatic or literary work, usually between two or more speakers. Development Dialogue is one of the most common ways an author reveals character. The words a character uses also serve to relate the plot to the reader

What Dialogue Should Do 4 Things Dialogue Should Do: DO reveal characters’ relationships to each other DO move the story forward DO increase the tension DO give a distinct voice to your character If your dialogue doesn’t do at least one of these things, you might want to reconsider using it!

What Dialogue Should Not Do 4 Things Dialogue Should NOT Do: DON'T go on and on and on. There should be a good balance between dialogue, action, and reflection. DON'T info-dump i.e. show lots of info in the dialogue, instead of in the action DON’T use to simply repeat information the reader already knows summarization vs. dialogue DON'T let the reader get disoriented Use action tags (e.g. "he said") when they are necessary Be careful with action tags - they can get repetitive and boring if over-used

Bad Examples of Dialogue “Hey dude. How are you?” Isabel said. “I’m really good. Thanks for asking. And you?” Gabe said. “Good, thanks,” Isabel said. “How do you like the weather?” Gabe asked. “It’s way too cold,” Isabel answered. What makes this a bad example?

Bad Examples of Dialogue “My daddy won’t let me play with Stevie’s trucks, which makes me cry because I’m only four years old and I’m already a victim of gender stereotypes.” What makes this a bad example?

Bad Examples of Dialogue Annie watched in horror as the car ahead of her smashed into the brick wall of the restaurant and burst into flames. Three people ran out of the building to see what had happened. Annie pulled over to see if they needed help, but before she could do anything the fire trucks, police cars, and ambulance arrived on the scene. She decided to drive home instead. “Something awful happened,” Annie told her sister when she got home. “What happened?” her sister asked. “I saw a car crash into the wall of a restaurant and catch fire. Three people rushed outside, and I pulled over to see if I could help, but the fire trucks, police, and ambulance came right away, so I drove home instead.” What makes this a bad example?

Good Examples of Dialogue “What’s the capital of Spain?” Jerry asked, pausing over his crossword puzzle. Susan looked up from her book and rolled her eyes. “Madrid, duh.” “Why are you so sarcastic all the time?” Jerry slammed his pencil on the table. He looked like he was going to cry. “I don’t think I can take much more of this.” What makes this a good example? Example of Dialogue that reveals character relationships Ask what kind of relationship Jerry and Susan have. Ask how the dialogue makes this relationship clear.

Good Examples of Dialogue The phone rang, and Jerry picked it up. “Hello?” There was a moment of silence on the other end. “Is this Jerry Simmons?” a male voice asked. “Yeah, who is this?” The man paused. Jerry could hear him take a deep breath. “Jerry, my name is Dave. I’m your brother.” “If this is a prank, it isn’t funny,” Jerry said. “My family died a long time ago.” “Not your whole family,” Dave said. Jerry hung up the phone. What makes this a good example? Example of Dialogue that moves the story forward Ask how the plot has been advanced in this exchange.

Good Examples of Dialogue “Dave!” Jerry shouted. “We’ve got to get away from here! The building’s gonna blow!” “We’ve got to go back!” Dave screamed. “Why?” Dave pointed at the roof. “Susan’s still up there!” What makes this a good example? Example of Dialogue that increases the tension Ask what tension has been established.

Punctuating Dialogue Indent each time a new character talks/the speaker changes. This helps the reader keep track of who is talking. In general, use a comma between the dialogue and the dialogue tag line, unless you use alternate punctuation. For example: “He never loved you,” she said. “He never loved you!” she said. “He never loved you?” she said. Punctuation that goes with the dialogue stays inside the quotation mark.

General Read Persepolis pages 47-71 Complete the Dialogue Analysis Use one conversation from The Heroes Use one conversation from Moscow

Advanced Read I Am Malala “Prologue: The Day my World Changed” Complete the Dialogue Analysis Use one conversation from Persepolis pages 47-71 Use one conversation from I Am Malala “Prologue: The Day my World Changed”

Formative Assessment Write two different exchanges of dialogue that could be used in your narrative. Each use of dialogue should have at least 3 back and forth exchanges. Be sure to first identify the purpose of your dialogue Reveal relationships Move the plot forward Increase the tension Add voice to a character

Advanced Homework Read pages 72-93 of Persepolis by the beginning of next class. Don’t forget to be filling out your reading strategies chart.