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Second Semester:: at The End of This Module, You Would Be Able To

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Second Semester: MODULE 5

TO BE SUBMITTED ON APRIL 12, 2021


At the end of this module, you would be able to:
a. Revise the draft of a short piece using any of the literary conventions of a genre
(HUMSS_CNF11/12-lb-d-7)
Pre-Assessment: Agree or Disagree!

Directions: The following statements enable you to gauge your level of


understanding about clarity of ideas and the literary elements of Creative Nonfiction .
You are required to agree or disagree with each of the following statements. You will
answer the activity in a separate sheet of paper divided into two columns. The first
column will be labeled Before the module study and the second column will be
labeled After the module study. Place a check mark () on the Before the Module
Study column if you agree with the statement and a cross (X) if you do not agree.
Leave the After the Module Study column for you will answer it in the later part of
this module.

Before the After the


Module Statement Module
Study Study
1. Accuracy is the same with clarity.
2. It’s okay to make readers work through
the implications of what you’re saying.
3. The longer the sentence is, the more complex it
is to understand its meaning.
4. To make a thought simpler, provide examples to
the readers.
5. When examples are fun and topical, readers pay
more attention.
6. Writers of creative nonfiction base their stories
on
real events.
7. Extensive research is needed so as not to
compromise the truthfulness of the events.
8. To emphasize critical moments, writers slow
down
or speed up the pace of the story.
9. The most commonly used point of view for
creative nonfiction is second person.
10. An engaging dialogue grant characters a degree
of individuality.

1. How to make our ideas clear in creative nonfiction?


Clear writing is a writing that readers can follow.
It’s okay to make readers work through the implications of what you’re
saying, but it’s not okay to make them piece together what you’re saying
in the first place.
Readers must easily understand every point.
We'll explore two tools for increasing clarity:
Simple sentences
Examples and Counterexamples

Simple Sentences
You use plain phrasing.
You use fewer ideas per sentence.

Use plain phrasing where possible.


Here’s a sentence with complex phrasing:
"The obstacle facing media organizations is to chart an economically
sustainable course through a landscape of commodity journalism.”Let’s
rewrite that sentence plainly:
“News companies are having a hard time staying in business
because anyone with a blog or Twitter account can report the news
now."
Simplify your sentences without dumbing down your ideas.

Use fewer ideas per sentence.


Consider this bad paragraph:
“There is a fast-growing collection of data describing the structure and
functional capacity of human gut bacteria in a variety of conditions. Ongoing
efforts to further characterize the multitude of functions of gut bacteria and the
mechanisms underlying its interactions will provide a better understanding of
the role of the microbiome in human health and disease.”

Let’s rewrite it:

“There’s a lot of research on gut bacteria. We’re quickly learning what roles
bacteria play and how they interact with each other. Researchers want to better
understand how these bacteria affect our overall health.”

The original paragraph's sentences contained two ideas each. That’s a


problem. Your brain interprets the meaning of a sentence after it's done reading
it. So, the longer the sentence, the more details you hold in your head at once.
That makes understanding a complex point even harder. Don't be mean to your
readers. Make it effortless to read your words.
Beware of rephrasing
When authors restate a point, they point it out:
“In other words…”
“That is to say…”
“Put another way…”
These are often red flags: the point that came before needed to be rephrased
to be understood.
Instead, delete the rephrasing and reword the original statement to be self- evident:
use plain wording and use fewer ideas per sentence.
If simplification can't achieve the necessary clarity, it's time to provide examples.

Provide examples
Providing examples is another tool for improving clarity. Examples make
abstract statements specific. Your brain best remembers things this way. A
few tips for providing examples:

 Provide before and after examples, or counterexamples, to clarify what


you don’t mean. Help readers orient themselves on a spectrum of right
and wrong.
 If you make examples fun and topical, readers pay more attention.
 Examples with many moving parts should be diagrams.
 Don’t waste time with examples if you’re confident your point was self-
evident

Takeaways for clear writing

If you write something unclear, you're writing for an audience of one: yourself. You might as
well be writing in your diary.
Instead, be clearer than you think is necessary. Use simple wording, use simple sentences,
and provide examples.
Simple language doesn't weaken your writing. It strengthens your points by helping what
matters stand out.

1. What are the elements to choose from when writing nonfiction?


a. Reflection
The subjects in this genre usually center on events of personal significance to the
writer. For this reason, narrative nonfiction commonly exhibits elements of narrative
reflection— writers provide their thoughts and views on the events and experiences
that have colored their lives. Writers may also comment on the manner in which
these experiences and people have influenced other aspects of their lives. In such
cases, works of narrative nonfiction resemble the nonfiction genres of memoir or the
personal essay because they serve as a platform for the writer’s personal views and
opinions.

b. Accuracy and Research


First and foremost, writers of narrative nonfiction base their stories on real
events. Although narrative nonfiction typically reflects on the personal experience of
the writer, a writer must accurately convey the people, places, and events that occur
within the narrative. As a result, a writer may need to conduct extensive research so
as not to compromise the truthfulness of the events and people discussed. Writers
must fluidly and creatively blend accurate, researched-based details with narrative
story-telling techniques.
The biography is another type of nonfiction that overlaps with narrative
nonfiction as far as attention to facts. Like writers of narrative nonfiction, writers of
biographies research details to ensure that their work is truthful and accurate. Unlike
biographies, however, narrative nonfiction provides writers with more creative
license to depict people, places, and events.

c. Characterization
Similar to characters in a fiction narrative, characters in a work of nonfiction
can be dynamic and undergo meaningful growth and change. The author may recall a
memory of a person and use personal perception to further develop the character. The
flexibility of the narrative nonfiction genre allows the writer to fictionalize or blur
certain elements of a character or event. Because a writer doesn’t know the full and
truthful motives or thoughts of a person, this genre gives license for writers to
develop and fictionalize certain features of an actual person.
Writers may use engaging dialogue to make characters distinct from one
another and grant them a degree of individuality. Narrative nonfiction allows the
writer to develop a particular conflict (such as character versus society) for characters
that may simplify or not precisely portray the person’s actual life.

d. Plot
The plot of a narrative nonfiction work may follow the structure of a fictional
novel, starting with the element of exposition and moving on to rising action, climax,
falling action, and resolution. This narrative structure allows the writer to bring
cohesion and resolution to real-life events that may not have been so clearly
defined.

e. Narration and Point of View


Sometimes works of nonfiction, like biographies, may chronicle the life of a
person over a span of years. In narrative nonfiction, writers use techniques such as
time sequencing to jump to or between critical parts of the story. The writer may
also use flash-forward or flashback to move through the plot. Narrative pacing also
enables writers to slow down or speed up the pace of the story to emphasize critical
moments.
As with other narrative forms, writers of narrative nonfiction can use different
narrative point of views, but first person and third person are the most common.
First-person narration enables writers to express their personal views about real-life
people and events. In third person, the perspective is limited for writers because they
cannot accurately understand the internal thoughts and motivations of the real people
represented by their characters. Instead, writers must use what they've learned or
observed about the actual people to develop the characters and events.

Assessment Activity
Direction: Write the letter of your answer in a separate sheet of paper.

1. People have different ways of learning. Some are better at making mental pictures of
new ideas. Others are more comfortable with writing lists of things to memorize. Certain
people can learn best when listening to music, while others need silence to concentrate.
Which of the following is the main idea of the passage?
a. Mental pictures help many to learn.
b. Some people prefer lists to making mental pictures.
c. To learn well you need to be comfortable.
d. Different individuals have different ways of acquiring information.
2. If you hold a piece of copper wire over the flame of a wooden match, heat will be
conducted by the copper wire to your fingers, and you will be forced to drop the wire. You
will, however, still be able to hold the match because wood is a poor conductor of heat.
Which of the following is implied in the passage above?
a. Copper is a good conductor of heat.
b. Matches should be made of copper.
c. Wood and copper conduct heat equally.
d. Wood is an excellent conductor of heat.
3. Cesar Chavez was an influential leader for farm workers. He fought for their rights
and better working conditions. Chavez led many strikes that angered farm owners.
Eventually he succeeded in getting increased wages and better living situations for farm
workers. The passage indicates that Chavez changed lives by .
a. fighting for the rights of farm owners
b. helping to end the farm workers’ strikes
c. improving the conditions for farm workers
d. working on the farms every day
4. Many people own different pets. Dogs, cats, birds, and fish are common household
pets. Others’ pets are considered to be exotic animals. These include snakes, lizards, and
hedgehogs. According to the passage, snakes are .
a. found only in zoos
b. C. uncommon pets
c. to be found in a household with dogs
d. D. not allowed in people’s homes
5. When cartoonist Charles M. Schulz was a boy in elementary school, other boys
teased him for being small and not very good at sports, and his art teacher told him he
had no talent for drawing. He had few friends and was too shy to talk to a red-haired
girl he admired. Later in life, Schulz used his childhood experiences in his comic strip
Peanuts: the strip’s main character, the sad and lonely Charlie Brown, represents Schulz
as a little boy. Peanuts was unique at the time because it contained no adult characters.
Readers fell in love with Charlie Brown, and Peanuts eventually became one of the
most popular comic strips of all time. What is the main idea of the passage?
a. Peanut was the world’s most widely read comic strip.
b. Schulz was a very famous cartoonist.
c. Schulz turned the pain of his youth into success as an adult.
d. The comic strip Peanuts featured children as its only characters.

Anticipation Reaction Guide

Direction: The following statements enable you to gauge your level of


understanding about clarity of ideas and the literary elements of Creative
Nonfiction. You are required to agree or disagree with each of the following
statements. You will answer the activity in the same separate sheet of paper that
you used earlier. Place a check mark (/) on the After the Module Study column if
you agree with the statement and cross (X) if you do not agree.

Before the After the


Module Statement Module
Study Study
1.Accuracy is the same with clarity.
2. It’s okay to make readers work through
the implications of what you’re saying.
3. The longer the sentence is, the more complex
it
is to understand its meaning.
4. To make a thought simpler, provide examples
to
the readers.
5. When examples are fun and topical, readers
pay
more attention.
6. Writers of creative nonfiction base their
stories on real events.
7. Extensive research is needed so as not to
compromise the truthfulness of the events.
8. To emphasize critical moments, writers slow
down or speed up the pace of the story.
9. The most commonly used point of view
for creative nonfiction is second person.
10. An engaging dialogue grant characters a
degree of individuality.
REFERENCES

Printed

Arciaga, Maximina L. et al. 2010. Literatures of the Philippines. Baguio City:


Saint Louis University.
Medriano Jerome P. (2020) Rubrics in Writing a Story Analysis. Retrieved July 25
from http://rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php

Murcia, Loren (2015) Action Research on Student and Pupil Absenteeism in School.
Retrieved September 2 from https:// www.google.com

Murray, Andrew V. 2008. High School Subjects for Self- Study. Quezon City:
Success Unlimited Enterprises.
Website Sources

https://owl.purdue.edu/index.html
https://wabisabilearning.com/blogs/assessment/15-assessment-activities- fast-
formative
https://writingcenter.baruch.cuny.edu/online-resources/writing-
guides/clarity-style/
http://www.butte.edu/departments/cas/tipsheets/style_purpose_strategy/
writing_clearly.html
https://www.julian.com/guide/write/editing-and-style
https://www.lib.sfu.ca/about/branches-depts/slc/writing/style/better- sentences
https://www.monash.edu/rlo/research-writing-assignments/writing/clear-
communication/writing-clearly-concisely-and-precisely
https://www.trainingcoursematerial.com/free-games-
activities/communication-skills-activities
http://www.wildwords.org/blog/2016/2/16/clarity-of-ideas
https://theartofeducation.edu/2017/03/14/5-types-rubrics-use-art- classes/

Prepared by: HENNY LEEN C. PEREz

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