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Resources: Ten Character Diary Entries
Ask your students to choose a character daily and write a diary entry addressing the chapter(s)
covered that day from the point of view of that character. For example, in Chapter 2 of To Kill
a MockingBird Scout might start off by writing "Dear Diary, Today I met my teacher. She is not
very nice." The following questions are written as they'd be read by the character that the student
chooses, so the word "you" refers to the character.
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What are you most afraid of or worried about? What is making you anxious? Describe
the person, object, or event that bothers you. Talk about specifically what concerns
you--Why are you worried? What's the worst thing that could happen? What do you hope
will occur? How do your fears or worries relate to the things that have happened so
far?
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Who has impressed, annoyed, or pleased you most so far? What other character has
had the strongest effect on you? Who is the other character? Describe the interaction
you've had, and why you feel the way that you do? How have the other character's
actions influenced the way that you feel?
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When you grow up, what do you want to do or be? What are your aspirations? What job
do you want to have? When you dream about the future, what do you think about? What do
you dream that you will be? How does what you want to do relate to who you are now?
OR if your character is already grown up, what do you want to accomplish in your
life? What big goals have you set for yourself, and why? When you daydream about what
you might be or do in your life, what do you dream about? What are you doing? And how
do your dreams relate to who you are now?
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What is your biggest accomplishment so far? What have you done that has made you
proud of yourself? Describe what you've done, how it made you feel, and why you think
it was so important--what makes it your biggest accomplishment? When you think about
your accomplishment, how does it make you feel about the future? How would you
complete a sentence such as this: when I think about this great accomplishment, I only
hope that in the future, I'll be able to __________.
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If you could relive a moment, what moment would you like to relive, and why? What
event do you think about? Why is it such a strong memory for you? Why is it stuck in
your thoughts? If you revisited this event, would you change it? Would you do anything
differently? Would you try to notice something in particular? Would you want to relive
it exactly as it occurred the first time? Describe the event in a way that makes your
interest in reliving it clear.
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What has made you happy recently? Describe the event, object, or person who has
brought you happiness, and explore why you felt happy. Reflect on the event, object,
or person--look back and think about exactly the way that you felt. What does your
happiness tell you about who you are and how your mind works?
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Sketch your house, yard, office, or another important space that you know well.
Label all your special things and the specific places. Once you've sketched things
out, write a description about the place that explains why it's important to you. What
makes the place significant? Why do you remember it? How does the place make you feel,
and why? How does it relate to who you are--is it messy, neat, clean, and so forth?
What qualities does the place have, and how do those qualities relate to what you want
in life?
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What lesson(s) have you learned? What have the events that you've been through
taught you? Think of them as a sort of fable--what would the moral be? Describe the
events in a way that makes the lesson that you've learned clear. Once you've described
the lesson, talk about why it is an important lesson and how you think that it will
affect you in the future.
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Describe your dream room or getaway. If you could escape, where would you go? What
would you do? Use details to describe your getaway--what does it look like? what
sounds do you hear? what do you smell? How does your dream place relate to the places
that you live in and visit now? Reflect on why you would want to escape to this
place--Why is it better than where you are now? Why this place instead of
another?
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Choose a value or ideal that is important to you--honesty, courage, faithfulness,
and so forth. Define your value, and explore how it relates to your life. Why is this
ideal important to you? What events, objects, or people have brought this word to
mind? And what makes it more than just a word? What makes it an important value or
ideal? Describe the events in your life that make this an important value, and explore
how and why the ideal has grown so important to you.
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