Story Builder: Lesson 1: Difference between revisions
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(New page: {{Translations}} == Lesson 1: What is a Story? == left #Tell a favorite story to your class. You can also use a picture book if one is accessible. #Take t...) |
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#Take time to illustrate/draw the story that has been told or read. Use whatever you have to draw with -- paper, sand and a stick, or the Paint program on the XO Laptop. Once you have completed your drawings, explain what you have drawn. |
#Take time to illustrate/draw the story that has been told or read. Use whatever you have to draw with -- paper, sand and a stick, or the Paint program on the XO Laptop. Once you have completed your drawings, explain what you have drawn. |
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#Every story contains these elements: |
#Every story contains these elements: |
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-Setting (the place where a story happens) |
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-Characters (the people or creatures in the story) |
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-Problem (the issue that the characters must face) |
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-Resolution (how the characters handle the problem, and what happens to them as a result.) |
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#Identify each of these elements in the story that you just read/told. |
#Identify each of these elements in the story that you just read/told. |
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#Now Brainstorm a list of interesting settings (i.e. home, the beach, school, church) |
#Now Brainstorm a list of interesting settings (i.e. home, the beach, school, church) |
Revision as of 21:36, 18 July 2007
Please copy/paste "{{Translationlist | xx | origlang=en | translated={{{translated}}}}}" (where xx is ISO 639 language code for your translation) to Story Builder: Lesson 1/translations | HowTo [ID# 52816] +/- |
Lesson 1: What is a Story?
- Tell a favorite story to your class. You can also use a picture book if one is accessible.
- Take time to illustrate/draw the story that has been told or read. Use whatever you have to draw with -- paper, sand and a stick, or the Paint program on the XO Laptop. Once you have completed your drawings, explain what you have drawn.
- Every story contains these elements:
-Setting (the place where a story happens) -Characters (the people or creatures in the story) -Problem (the issue that the characters must face) -Resolution (how the characters handle the problem, and what happens to them as a result.)
- Identify each of these elements in the story that you just read/told.
- Now Brainstorm a list of interesting settings (i.e. home, the beach, school, church)
- Brainstorm a list of interesting characters (i.e. princess, monster, child, teacher)
- Brainstorm ideas about problems and resolutions. Think of problems or resolutions that have come up in stories you know, or that have come up in your life or imagination.
- Record all of these ideas to spark your imagination for new stories. Use the Write program on the XO laptop. Create a chart or on poster paper to hang in the classroom.
- Act out a story based on selected story elements. Pick a setting, a few characters, a problem and a resolution from the lists you created. Allow volunteers from the class to act out a story from this. Just make it up as you go along.