English

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NarrativeEssay1011.docx

Narrative Essay: 10%

Due the Sunday of Week 11 at 11:59pm via Blackboard

What steps should you take to complete this assignment?:

Review our notes from Week 7 for support. Have a think: do you want to “tell an interesting story, describe a memorable event, observe the details in your world, imagine a possibility, or reflect on who you are and what you believe?” (Gonchar, 2014.)

This is your opportunity to write in a way which draws upon personal opinion and lived experience. There are no hard-and-fast rules for this style of “memoir-based” writing; however, some thoughts to consider:

· You may choose to use the first person: “I”

· You may wish to mimic a spoken-quality.

· It can be helpful to imagine you are orating a story to a friend. Complete factuality isn’t always necessary. The act of remembering is reconstructive, and may involve misremembering and reimagining details.

· You may seek to capture the essence of what is important, and colour in the memory gaps.

· Consider audience. Why is this story interesting to readers? What it the most suitable language and tone for your anticipated audience?

· Descriptive language and literary devices engage your readers.

· Hook your reader with a personal anecdote or story. How can you immediately grab your reader’s attention by introducing your essay with a statement that shocks, alarms, or rouses curiosity?

· You may wish to follow an A to B trajectory, with a beginning, a middle, and an end.

· You may opt for a cyclical structure, returning to your introductory hook at the end as you conclude your essay.

· Ethos: how can you establish credibility in your essay?

· Logos: is your story logical? Do you include the ideas of others to reinforce the validity, and stakes, of your own story?

· Pathos: can you make an emotional case for your position? Return to your story: how did this experience affect you?

· You may write in complete sentences with correct spelling, grammar, and punctuation. Short, “incomplete” sentences may be useful, however, to add depth and movement.

· Always proofread your essay thoroughly.

Your essay must:

· Be formatted to APA standards

· Include an APA cover page

· Include an APA reference page (if external sources are used)

· Be a minimum of 500 - 700 words long

Looking for inspiration? See “500 Prompts for Narrative and Personal Writing,” also linked in Blackboard: https://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/11/13/500-prompts-for-narrative-and-personal-writing/

How will your essay be assessed?

Use the criteria below to check your own work before submitting.

Criteria

Value

Does the essay have an accurate APA cover page?

.5 marks

Is the essay formatted according to APA guidelines?

.5 marks

Does the essay introduction open with a hook that grabs the reader’s attention with a statement that shocks, alarms, or rouses curiosity?

1 mark

Does the essay follow a coherent structure?

1.5 marks

How compelling is the essay? Does it impel the reader to read on?

2 marks

Does the essay successfully incorporate ethos, logos, and/or pathos?

1 mark

Does the essay indulge in colourful, descriptive language, and/or use literary devices?

1 mark

Does the essay end with a satisfactory conclusion?

1 mark

Is the essay written in audience-appropriate language, free from grammar and spelling mistakes?

1 mark

Does the essay include an accurate APA reference on a reference page?

.5 mark