Effective Writing For Narrative, Expository, and Persuasive Essays

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Effective Writing for

Narrative, Expository,
and Persuasive Essays
Types of Required Writings
for 10th grade

• Narrative---tells a story

• Expository---tells how to do something or


how to define something

• Persuasive---tries to convince others


(This one will be discussed in English
Communication)
What is a Narrative Essay?
• Tells a story
• Has a clear beginning, middle, and end
• Sequence of events is very important and
story can follow plot chart pretty well.
• Needs to have words that move reader
through time
• Can you think of any???
– Before, after, during, next, etc…
Topic #1
Narrative Autobiography
• Write a story about an event or
experience from your own life.
• You, the writer, are the main character
• Events need to be important to the story,
not just random for filling space
• Contains a conflict
• Has an interior monologue---that is you
reveal what you are thinking and feeling
• Contains a lesson you learned or insight
you gained from the experience.
What is an Expository Essay?
• Tells how to do something or how to define
something

• Needs supporting details---more than just


a list of examples
Topic #2
Expository
• Choose ONE character from any of the
stories we read and complete a character
sketch on that person (this is not a
drawing, but rather an essay)
• How do I do this?
– Identify significant or important character traits
of your character
– Develop each of these traits using specific
examples from the story
Topic #3
Expository
• Define Friendship

• Using your own ideas and feelings AND


those expressed in “Two Friends” write an
extended definition of friendship.
• This should be detailed with specific
examples
Parts of a Paper
• Introduction
– Hook
– Background
– Thesis
• Body
– Topic Sentence
– High level of Support/Examples
• Conclusion
– Effective Ending
– Closure on issues without being repetitive
from Intro.
– Tie up paper and relate back to hook/thesis
Hook
• Attention Grabber
• Can be Quote, Definition, Interesting
Fact/Stat, Riddle/Pun, etc…
• Must be somehow related to your topic, not
random selection
• This is NOT your Position!!!! Your position of
a paper is most likely your thesis statement.
You Try: Write a Hook for the
following topics
• Family

• School uniforms

• Prince Prospero from “Masque of the


Red Death”
Background Information
• This part of your Introduction should be fairly
general. Should let reader know what stories
you will be referencing, author’s name, etc.)

• Should state the main points of your paper in a


general way. (not specific examples yet)

• Avoid just listing the main topics you will


discuss.

• Rather, try to use transition words to connect


those main points.
Thesis Statement
• Could be last sentence of your Intro.
• Statement of your position or main idea you
hope to get across in your paper
• Should be clear and concise---use effective
language (avoid being repetitive)
• NEVER< NEVER< NEVER use “I am going to
tell you about…” or “In this paper I will
discuss…”
You decide: Are these good thesis
statements for the topics?
• School Uniforms: I am going to tell you why I
think school uniforms are stupid and are
therefore dumb, so they should not be allowed in
any school.

• Prince Prospero: Even though many consider


Prince Prospero to be an eccentric duke, when it
comes to death, he acts like anyone else.

• Family: What does family mean to you?


• Thesis Statements 1 & 3 are NOT
STRONG statements.
• 1 is repetitive, uses poor language, says “I
am going to tell you” and not concise
• 3 is a question, so it is not a statement
• Thesis Statement 2 would be a STRONG
thesis statement because it is clear, states
the main idea, and uses effective language
without giving all the specific information
away.
How can we fix Statements 1 & 3?
• School Uniforms: I am going to tell you
why I think school uniforms are stupid and
are therefore dumb, so they should not be
allowed in any school.

• Family: What does family mean to you?


Body Paragraphs
• First Sentence of EACH body paragraph should
be a TOPIC SENTENCE
– This again should be clear and should inform
the reader about the issue to be discussed in
that paragraph.
• The rest of the paragraph should contain
SUPPORT
– These are examples and the explanation of
how the example relates to your point
• AVOID listing several examples with NO
explanation

• Vary your Sentence Structure---try to start


sentences and paragraphs in different ways.

• It is far better to pick a couple of examples and


explain them in detail, rather than list lots of
examples---discuss how examples relate to
each other and to the topic sentence
Most Important
• USE Transition Words

• These are words that connect examples with


the explanation AND connect one paragraph
to the next

• Using these will help you write more complex


and varied sentences.

• See Handout for Examples


Transition Words
• AVOID---First, second, third, etc…
• Some examples for persuasive are:
– During, eventually, mainly, strongest, greater,
better, least, greatest, best, most, worse,
similarly, either…or, neither…not, not
only…but also, likewise, also, nevertheless,
although, but, instead, yet, however, opposed
to, unlike, since, because, as a result, so, due
to, thus, therefore, if…then, consequently
Conclusion
• Conclusion should build in an orderly
way---This is your last HURRAH!!!!
• It should not be repetitive of the Intro,
but should be related to the Intro.
• Should be developed (min. 5
sentences).
• Can restate your points, but again, try
not to be redundant or repetitive
Effective Ending Statements
• “final thoughts”
• Project into the future
• Lesson learned
• Call to action
• Offer a broader perspective (one that
could apply to all people)
• Give thoughts to think about
• As and Answer a rhetorical question
Tips for Timed Writing
• Don’t Panic
• Read all the topics FIRST
• Pick the topic you are most familiar with,
NOT the one you have the strongest
reaction to.
• PLAN your ideas---take a few minutes to
map out your arguments
–Webs, flow charts, venn diagrams,
bubble charts, outline, etc…
Tips (cont.)

• When you begin writing, don’t forget to have


a solid INTRODUCTION with all the parts
(hook, background, thesis)
• If you finish early, PROOFREAD what you
wrote.
– Sometimes we omit a word accidentally
because our minds think faster than we can
write.

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