plot element notes

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Plot and Conflict What makes a great story? Unit 1 Notes

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Page 1: Plot Element Notes

Plot and Conflict

What makes a great story? Unit 1 Notes

Page 2: Plot Element Notes

Warm UpYou and your group members are stranded on a deserted island.

•You only have the items written on your group’s notecard with you to survive and escape.

•Work with your group to write a short tale describing the events that occurred on your island.

Image Source

Page 3: Plot Element Notes

PlotNarrative is a fancy

word for storyPlot = the series of

events in a narrative

Page 4: Plot Element Notes

Conflict

Conflict is at the heart of any good story.

Conflict is a struggle between opposing forces.

Two types of conflict:

internal conflict = a struggle within the character’s mind

external conflict = a clash between a character and an outside force, such as another character, society, or a force of nature

Page 5: Plot Element Notes

Specific Internal/External

ConflictsInternal Conflict Types

External Conflict Types

character vs. himself: a struggle between opposing needs, desires, and emotions within the character

character vs. character: two characters struggle against each other (verbally, physically, etc.)

character vs. society: a character struggling against society’s pressures (the expectations of a group, cultural traditions, social rules, etc.)

character vs. nature: a character struggling against forces of nature (storm, flood, drought, bitter cold, etc.)

Page 6: Plot Element Notes

Famous Stories and their conflicts

Famous text:

conflict : internal or external

• What type?

why? :

Famous text:

conflict: internal or external

• What type?

why?:

Page 7: Plot Element Notes

Plot Structure

Exposition: introduces setting, characters, and conflict

Rising Action: builds suspense; presents complications that intensify the conflict

Climax: the turning point; moment of greatest suspense; makes outcome of conflict clear

Falling Action: eases the suspense, reveals the outcome of the climax, shows the resolution of the conflict

Resolution: reveals the final outcome, ties up loose ends

Page 8: Plot Element Notes

Narrative Structure Mountain

• Which goes where???

• Falling action

• Exposition

• Resolution

• Rising action

• Climax

Page 9: Plot Element Notes

Sequence and Time

Most stories follow chronological order (events follow a linear structure meaning they follow in the order they happened)

However, sometimes author’s chose to play with the order of events:

Flashback: an account of a conversation, episode, or event that happened before the beginning of the story, or at an earlier point

Foreshadowing: a writers use of hints or clues in early scenes to suggest events that will occur later

Page 10: Plot Element Notes

Flashback is... An image or memory clue to help me remember flashback:

What does flashback do in a story?

Strategies to recognize flashback:

Flashback

Page 11: Plot Element Notes

Flashback is...• an account that

occurred at an earlier time

An image or memory clue to help me

remember flashback:

What does flashback do in a story? •interrupts the main action to describe something that happened earlier• shows how past events led to the present• gives background info

Strategies to recognize flashback: •Look for possible word clues such as “that summer” or “as a young boy” or “her earliest memory”•Keep track of chronological order to recognize flashback

Flashback

Page 12: Plot Element Notes

Foreshadowing is... An image or memory clue to help me remember foreshadowing...

What does foreshadowing do in a story?

Strategies to recognize foreshadowing:

Foreshadowing

Page 13: Plot Element Notes

Foreshadowing is...

• use of hints to suggest what will

happen later

An image or memory clue to help me remember foreshadowing...

What does foreshadowing

do in a story? •prepares the reader for

events that will happen

later•creates suspense•makes you want to keep

reading

Strategies to recognize

foreshadowing:

• notice repeated ideas

and descriptions

•notice characters acting

unusually or strangely

Foreshadowing