BELL ACTIVITY: READ SILENTLY 02 OCT 2014 – 2 ND HALF OF BLOCK Today’s Agenda:  Literary POINT OF VIEW  Intro to TONE & MOOD.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TPCASTT (a way to Analyze Poetry)
Advertisements

Story Elements 6th grade RELA.
If I said … “What a great paper!” … what would you think?
Bell Ringer  Complete the Main Idea Comprehension sheet on the table. Reread and review your answers.
PA State Standards Mood & Tone LANGUAGE ARTS.
Faith and eddie By Patrick Jennings.
OBJECTIVES: What is Tone? What is Mood? How are Tone and Mood Effective in Writing?
Tone and Mood Notes.
Connotations and Tone Ms. Jordan. Denotation vs. Connotation Denotation is the dictionary or literal meaning of a word. Connotative words create suggestions.
Literary Mood How are you feeling?.
Mood Introductory video: “Tone and Mood in Literature”
Mood Tone What’s the difference?
E.O.G. Jeopardy! Poetry Elements EOG terms Story Elements Resources Author’s Purpose Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q.
POETRY: Tone and Mood How do you feel after……... Who or what determines your mood throughout the day? Are you more influenced by your friends? The weather?
TONE vs MOOD What they are and how you can tell the difference.
TONE/MOOD o Identifying tone and mood is important to understanding what the author is trying to convey to the reader as well as the theme of the poem.
 What does the word above mean? Jill’s friend, Kay, walked through the hallway. Kay looked at Jill in the eyes. “Hey,” she said, “what’s up?” HEY.
9/15/2015.  Please have ready:  Notebooks  Something to write with  Await further instruction DO NOW STEP 1.
Freewrite Think of a time you have heard someone use the expression “Don’t take that tone of voice with me”. What does this expression mean? What were.
OBJECTIVES: What is Tone? What is Mood? How are Tone and Mood Effective in Writing?
Poetry Analysis.  TPCASTT is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry – any poem.  You can also use the SIFT analysis, although TPCASTT.
Directions: Copy the following question and all four answer choices from your test last Friday. Then, circle which answer you believe to be true. 23. In.
MOOD The feeling or atmosphere that the writer creates for the reader is the mood.
Theme & Tone Rida, Rosie, and Annika. Theme ● A main idea or an underlying meaning of a literary work that may be stated directly or indirectly ● Conveyed.
Poetry Analysis Oct. 28, This is a process to help you organize your analysis of poetry. We have already learned the vocabulary, now it’s time to.
Mood & Tone Mood is the feeling that a story creates in the reader.
WHAT ARE THEY AND HOW DO WE TELL THE DIFFERENCE?
Tone is the AUTHOR’S attitude towards the audience, the subject, or the character You can recognize the tone/attitude by the language/word choices the.
Watch and Listen  EE&feature=related EE&feature=related  Watching film.
Story Elements Or Literary Elements Characters Characters are the people in a story. Characters can also be animals, birds, talking trees, sea creatures,
Meaning What is the work about? What is its theme? What effect or impression does the reader have ? What is the argument or summary of the work? What.
Literary Elements Part Three:
Boot Camp AP Literature
Western Literature Take out your journal for notes.
HOW AUTHORS CREATE FEELING FOR READERS TONE AND MOOD.
LITERARY TONE An attitude of a writer toward a subject or an audience, generally conveyed through the choice of words or the viewpoint of a writer on a.
Tone and Mood in Literature The difference between what you read and how you feel.
OBJECTIVES: What is Tone? What is Mood? How are Tone and Mood Effective in Writing?
A. theme B. main idea C. tone D. context A. The writer’s attitude toward the subject or audience B. What a piece of literature or a passage is mostly.
A Comparison.  Tone is the author’s attitude toward the subject of the piece or the audience.  Mood is the feeling or emotion created by the piece and.
Tone and Mood Review The Lady of Shalott. TONE  Every author creates a sense of tone through his/her word choice ( diction ), sentence structure ( syntax.
Warm Up: Adjectives An adjective is a word used to describe a noun or pronoun (usually tells which, what kind, or how many.)  Adjectives often limit,
Mr. Ewing Reading 6.  Identify the tone of the passage from the choices below and explain why.  Although the oil companies have created some issues.
Watch and Listen EE&feature=related
Identifying Tone and Mood
Theme, mood, tone, point of view
Watch and Listen EE&feature=related
Monday September 12,2016 SSR time We need Homework folders, writer’s notebooks, and composition books!
Notes on Setting/Tone/Imagery/Etc.
“Most Dangerous Game” Take out your Study Guides and a sheet of paper
Tone Mini-Lesson Tell-Tale Heart.
Elements of Fiction.
Unit 6 Text Analysis Workshop
Mood and Tone.
Mrs. Abendaño 7th Grade ELA
Plot & literary terms.
Tone vs. Mood.
Collection 6: Tales of the Strange and Mysterious
Tone and Mood.
Boot Camp AP Literature
Syntax, Diction, Tone, Mood
Unit 6 Text Analysis Workshop
Mood Introductory video: “Tone and Mood in Literature”
Update your Table of Contents Silently READ your JR book
“Watch your tone, Missy!”
Aim: How does the author’s tone change the reader’s experience?
How authors create feeling for readers
Warm-up 10/17 Write a sentence showing each of the following moods:
Tone and mood OBJECTIVES: What is Tone? What is Mood?
Presentation transcript:

BELL ACTIVITY: READ SILENTLY 02 OCT 2014 – 2 ND HALF OF BLOCK Today’s Agenda:  Literary POINT OF VIEW  Intro to TONE & MOOD

The Literary Elements of… Tone & Mood

Tone * Tone describes the author’s atti tude toward their topic.

TONE IS ABOUT THE ‘TUDE OR ATTITUDE OF THE WRITER. Tone is what the writer thinks about their topic.

In literature TONE is the 1 st element the writer experiences, as a writer’s attitude about a topic exists before she/he begins writing!

Writers choose their words, their sentence fluency, their organization based on their own TONE.

Mood * Mood is how the piece of literature makes the READER FEEL.

Writers choose their words, their sentence fluency, and their organization based on their own TONE……………... ……

How are they different? Tone refers to what the writer thinks about his topic or piece. Mood refers to how the reader feels or reacts to the piece.

THIS IS HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK A writer decides to write about a topic. He already has an attitude about that topic. That is his tone. The writer chooses words based on his tone. The writer wants his readers to feel a certain way after reading his story. He wants to control the MOOD. The writer looks at the words he choose because of his tone and makes sure that the words will create the mood he wants the reader to feel While reading the story you react to the words. They make you feel a certain way. The way the story makes the reader feel is the mood.

THIS IS HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK Your Mom relies on you to help out with the dishes and when you don’t it makes her angry. When you don’t, her TONE is angry She calls your name, Then she calls your full name. She starts to tell you about how she was counting on your help and how frustrated and angry she feels She wants you to feel guilty so you won’t forget again, so she chooses her words carefully so you will understand exactly how much this messes her up and feel guilty You listen and begin to realize how awful you made her day and feel guilty.. Your feeling of guilt is the MOOD your mom was hoping you would feel.

Words for Tone admiring affectionate appreciative angry proud Confused cynical Serious frightening loving disgusted calm excited hopeful confident sympathetic

Words for Mood  foreboding  gloomy  uplifted  frightened  optimistic  Pessimistic  apprehensive  light-hearted  peaceful  excited  joyous  passionate  terrifying  hopeless

Tone/Mood in Movies Just like an author uses word choice, sentence fluency and vivid imagery to set tone and create mood in literature, film makers use dialogue, editing, music and lighting to set the tone and create mood in movies.

Tone & Mood in Movies After each of the following clips, write two words that describe the mood two words that describe the tone.

Clip #1 “Mary Poppins” by Disney 2 words which describe the tone: 2 words which describe the mood:

Clip #2 “Mary Poppins Recut” 2 words which describe the tone: 2 words which describe the mood: