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Warm-up: Monday, 8/27/2012 Quick write in notebook:

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Presentation on theme: "Warm-up: Monday, 8/27/2012 Quick write in notebook:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Warm-up: Monday, 8/27/2012 Quick write in notebook: What are some things a child might do in a situation where an adult, who has more power, is being unfair to him or her?

2 Brain Pop Worksheet – handout. Put in notebook.
Warm-up: Tuesday, 8/28/2012 Brain Pop Worksheet – handout. Put in notebook.

3 Point of View

4 Point-of-View (Also called, “Narrative Mode”)
“The perspective with which the narrator sees the story.” First-Person: “Told by the main character, and the narrator refers to himself/herself as ‘I’. A first-person account is narrated by a character in the story. If you were writing an essay about your summer vacation, it might be in the first person. For example: "I spent a lot of time at the beach, but I also read a lot of books."

5 Point of View Second-Person: In second-person narrative, the narrator is not a character in the story--but "you" are. Instruction manuals are often written in the second person. For example: "Before you nail the two boards together, you should sand the sharp edges off.“ NEVER use this on an essay!!!!!!

6 Point-of-View (Also called, “Narrative Mode”)
“The perspective with which the narrator sees the story.” Third-Person:  In a third-person narrative, the narrator exists completely outside of the story. All characters are described as "he," "she," or "it." Normal 3rd person narrators cannot describe the emotions and thoughts. Third-person omniscient: the narrator can describe the innermost thoughts and feelings of her characters. For example: "As Fred watched Ginger from across the room, he wondered whether the two of them would ever truly know each other


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