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Resources: Ten Prewriting Exercises for Personal Narratives
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Think of the different people involved in the event that you're narrating as characters in a piece
of literature. In the same way that you'd write a character sketch for characters in a short
story or play, write a paragraph on each of the people involved in the event you're writing about.
Once you've finished, compare the details in your sketches to the details on the characters in your
draft. Revise your draft, based on the differences that you find.
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Sketch out the events as blocks in a comic strip. Don't worry about the artwork--just use stick
figures. What events would you focus on in your sketches? What parts would you leave out? Comic
strips don't show every single event that occurs; they focus on the events that are necessary to
the overall message. Once you've sketched out your blocks, take a look at your working draft. Are
the blocks that you include in your comic strip included in the narrative? Are they
recognizable--how do the blocks in your comic strip relate to the organizational structure of your
narrative? Are the ones that you've left out of the comic strip included in the narrative--if so,
what do they add to your overall purpose?
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Write a version of the events in your narrative for a newspaper article. Remember to include the
answers to the journalist's questions (who? what? where? when? why? how?). Focus on the facts as
they occurred. Use an inverted pyramid order--begin with the facts and details that are most
important to readers and end with the facts that are less important. Once you've finished,
compare the article to your working draft. Have you included all the facts in your draft that
you included at the beginning of your newspaper article? Are the details that you include toward
the end of the article (the ones that are less important) included in your working draft--are
they emphasized or subordinate? Think about what you would want someone who read that newspaper
article to know that isn't included in the article itself. Are those points included in your
narrative?
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Outline the events that occur in your narrative. Identify the places where you or others involved
had to make a decision of some kind. For each decision point, brainstorm on the alternatives that
could have been pursued. What other options were available? Once you've thought through the
possibilities, examine the way that you discuss the decisions in your draft--do you include
details on the alternatives? How do these other options affect the way that you think about
the event now? Have you looked back at the event that you're writing about and thought,
"Gee, I wish I had done that differently"? Add some depth to your narrative by fleshing out
alternatives as well as how and when they became important.
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Choose a time in your narrative when you and other characters are talking with one another.
Script out the conversation as an exchange in a play. Try to capture the language in the style
that would have actually been used. Make the dialogue accurate to the event; don't worry if it's
not Standard Written English (personal conversations rarely are). Once you've scripted out your
dialogue, move to your working draft. How does the dialogue that you've written in your script
compare to the episode in your narrative? Can you add details from the script to your draft?
How would adding the dialogue affect the purpose of your narrative?
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Describe the events that occurred for a different audience. How does your narrative change if it
is written for an older family member, someone interviewing you for a job, a younger student, or
someone you had never met before? What would you leave out? What would you add? What would you
describe in different language and style? How would the points that you emphasize change? Once
you've thought about the differences, return to your working draft. Are the points that you DO
include right for your audience? Are there parts of your alternate version that can be added to
your working draft? As you revise, think about the details in the narrative fit your audience in
particular.
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Reflect on the events as you recall them. Readers will want to know why you're sharing the story.
Your narrative needs to answer the question, "So what?" When your readers get to the end of the
story, you should have answered the question for them. Draw a chart with three columns. Label
the columns as follows:
Events | So What Do/Did I Think? | So What Do/Did Others Think?
Outline the major events in rows under the "Events" column; then, fill in the spaces under
the other columns for each of the major events. For each of the columns, try to think about the
"So What?" Explain why the event matters to you in the second column, and why the event matters
to others who are involved (directly or indirectly) in the third column. Think about how the
events mattered at the time and how they matter now, looking back. Once you've finished filling
in the chart, move to your working draft. Are the "So what?" details that you included in the
chart clear in your draft? Are there details that you can add to make the significance of the
event understandable to your readers?
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Think about the longevity of the event in your narrative. How will you remember the event five
years from now? ten years? twenty-five years? As you think about the effect of the events in the
narrative, you need to focus on how the events will matter to you and your readers. What kind of
staying power do the events have? Brainstorm or freewrite a few paragraphs on why you think this
event will still matter in the future. Once you've written about the longevity and enduring
importance, move back to your working draft. When you talk about events is their staying power
clear to the reader? How do you communicate the enduring qualities of the events in your narrative?
What details from your brainstorming or freewriting might you work into your draft?
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Think about the details included in your narrative--facts, sensory details, and emotions. Draw
a chart like this:
Facts | Sensory Details | Emotions
Then think about the facts that are important to your narrative, and fill in the chart. Work
to find at least ten important facts. For each, think about related sensory details (sight, sound,
taste, touch, smell), and consider the emotions related to the facts (fear, pleasure,
sadness, etc.). For instance, a fact in my narrative might be "three fresh baked loaves of
bread on the kitchen table." For sensory detail, I'd write about the smell of fresh baked bread,
the warmth of the kitchen from the still hot stove, and the golden brown color of the bread.
For emotions, I'd write about how the loaves of bread gave me a happy feeling as I remembered
how my father always bakes bread for special holidays and how my grandmother always baked us
bread when we visited her. Once you've finished working through the chart for the facts from
your paper, move back to your working draft. Are the sensory details and emotions that you
included in the chart communicated in your draft? Revise to add details, taking material from
your chart whenever you can.
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Write an account of the events in your narrative for a fable, a tabloid, or a television or
radio interview. These options give you a lot of room for creativity. What happens if the people
involved in the events were animals and you had to come up with a moral? If the events were
reported in a tabloid paper, what would be emphasized? Where would things be embellished? What
would be left out? Finally, if you were interviewed about the event, what would you include in
your story--your answer depends on where you're being interviewed (by Barbara Walters once
you're rich and famous? on a talk show by Oprah? on a late night show by David Letterman or
Jay Leno?) Be sure to indicate where you're being interviewed. Once you finish your alternate
account of the events, move to your working draft. Are there facts that you can add now that
you've thought about the events in your narrative from a different point of view? Are there
facts that seem less important? Can they be deleted? Did you add details and description to
your account that can be revised and added to your draft? What parts of your alternate version
wouldn't make any sense at all in your final draft of the narrative?
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