Creative Writing lp2
Creative Writing lp2
Creative Writing lp2
I. OBJECTIVES At the end of the session the learners are expected to:
c) Appreciate the
1. Content Standards The learner demonstrates understanding of: definition of fiction, and
determine the parts of the plot and its different types.
2. Performance The learner transfers learning by writing a literary piece consisting elements
Standards of fiction.
3. Learning Analyze the definition of fiction and how a plot is organized and written.
Competencies/
Objectives
II. CONTENT Elements of Fiction
A. References
b. Textbook Pages
IV.PROCEDURES
A. Introduction
Preliminaries
A. ROUTINARY ACTIVITIES
Prayer
Checking of classroom condition
Greetings
B. Development
What’s In?
quiz, we will give you a situation or a very short incomplete story in every question, and then
we'll ask you what happens next in that situation. You have to pick the right option that is most
probably to happen according to the given information in the question. Let us see how many
What’s New?
Fiction is divided into the short and long type, obviously based
on their differences in length and word count. Long fiction is also
known as the novel, while short fiction, though popularly named as
short story, can also be a novella, novelette or flash fiction.
ELEMENTS OF FICTION
1. Plot. How the author arranges event to develop the basic idea.
Also known as the structure or framework of the story, or the
sequence or timeline of events as they transpire, the plot comes
in five parts: (1) introduction, (2) inflation (or rising action), (3)
climax, (4) deflation (or falling action) and (5) resolution (or
denouement).
In Aspects of the Novel, Edward Morgan Foster defined story as
“the chronological telling of events,” and the plot as “the cause-and-
effect arrangement.”
Dramatic Structure
You may also add such conflicts as man vs. time, man vs. the
unknown, man against machine or technology, man against fate,
man against the supernatural and even man against God.
Types of Plot
2. Setting. Time and location that a story takes place. For some
stories, the setting is very important: while for others, it is not.
When examining how setting contributes to a story, there are
multiple aspects to consider:
a. Place - Geographical location; where is the action of the
action of the story taking place.
4. Low Mimetic – a story mode where the hero is one of us, with
an ability that is superior “neither” to other people nor the
environment.
D. Assimilation
Generalization
I have also learned that propaganda has different types of techniques such as
____________________________________________________________.
I have understood that words and expressions play an important role in a propaganda
because ____________________________________________.
Assessment
Post-Assessment: Elements of Fiction
10. At this stage of the story, the conflict is starting to get resolved.
a. climax c. inflation
b. deflation d. resolution
11. The type of narration limited to the actions and movements of the
characters.
a. objective c. omnipresent
b. omniscient d. operative
12. The narrator being the protagonist will have which of the following
point of view?
a. first person c. third person
b. second person d. fourth person
Prepared by:
JENNIFER L MENDOZA
Practice Teacher