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1.Take 5 minutes to spice up (or write) dialogue in your allegory. 2.Review (notes): How to format and punctuate dialogue + model 3.Take 5 more minutes to make your dialogue dia-rrific. 4.Photoshop: Take a photo of and send your dialogue to me. 5.Revise and edit your story: more more more more. AA 1.TURN IN your marked copy of “A Simple Way to Create Suspense.” 2.Final draft due Friday, Dec 14 3.Organize your notes and blogs in a binder (due Monday). Topic: Dialogue Writing Workshop Level: Revising, Creating December 12
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Yesterday, you... o Learned how to create suspense in your story. o Revised your story for greater suspense factor. o Workshopped your story with your shoulder partner. o Revised more more more.
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Reading Interactively: Pink Packet In order to earn full points, these are things you must do for the article “A Simple Way to Create Suspense.” o Mark the text of the article in at least 5 separate places. (Highlight or underline passages that seem significant or particularly relevant to the topic or the primary claim.) o In the space at the end of the article, respond to the following prompts. (Use the reverse of the back page if you need more room.) 1.State the main idea (primary claim) of the article. 2.Quote (write) two passages from the article that support the primary claim. (These passages must come from separate places in the article.) 3.Respond to the ideas in the article by relating them to your experience or understanding of how writers make readers “hungry” to read more. (50 words) 4.Explain what you will do to revise your allegory to make it more suspenseful.
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Today’s Objective Write and revise dialogue for... oauthenticity (sounding like real characters). oconventional formatting. oaccurate punctuation.
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Take 5 Dialogue Take five minutes to improve, fix, or write at least one passage of dialogue in your allegory.
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Formatting Dialogue 1.Use quotation marks before and after the quoted material. 2.Indent (start a new paragraph) at the beginning of a dialogue and each time the speaker changes. 3.Separate the speaker tag from the quoted material with some kind of punctuation (usually a comma). 4.Punctuation comes before the quotation mark. 5.Begin the quoted sentence with a capital letter. 6.Use a lower-case letter for the speaker tag (unless it’s someone’s name).
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1. Use quotation marks before and after the quoted material.
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2. Indent (start a new paragraph) at the beginning of a dialogue and each time the speaker changes. Also, indent for narration.
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3. Separate the speaker tag from the quoted material with some kind of punctuation (usually a comma).
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4. Punctuation comes before the quotation mark.
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5. Begin the quoted sentence with a capital letter. W I I S I W I b I
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6. Use a lower- case letter for the speaker tag (unless it’s someone’s name). s s c e
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Underline the verbs that show speaking.
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Dialogue Requirements 1.One extended conversation (dialogue) must occur in your story. 2.It must be at least five “lines” long. (Each character speaks 2 or three times.) 3.Use dialogue-writing conventions.
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On Your Fresh Binder Paper 1.Write (recopy or rewrite or write for the first time) the dialogue from your story. 2.Write verrrry legibly. 3.Take a pic and send it to amandelo@mpsaz.org. 4.When you finish, work on your pink-packet assignment (“How to Create Suspense”).
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