A. Narration
A. Narration
A. Narration
of
Development
T E R
P S K A O H L
R B Y
T P C E O V P
A E L R N O Y
L V R I T C W E
I E D A S V N S
R G T K O I R S I
A Y M A S N E H T
Y I G N L E S
D F M K P A L
skill
N A R R A T I O N
vivid
event narrate
I. Narration
- the most basic pattern of
development
-describes how, when, and
where an
event or occurrence actually
happened
Paced Narration
“He came and talked to us for a few moments.
He seemed upset, but he managed to
get through all the bad news. Shaking our
hands before he left the house come
twilight, he seemed to feel better now that he
had delivered the news. He waved from the car
as he pulled out of the driveway,
narrowly missing the mailbox again, and
3. Terminology
- places emphasis on the fact that
concepts are critical to the narration
Examples:
love, freedom, feminism
General Terms
- commonly used to denote groups
Example: furniture
Specific Terms
- refer to an individual
component of the group
Examples:
cabinets, desks, chairs
Concrete: “He was shivering violently
from the cold.”
Focus 30%
Organization 25%
Integration 25%
Convention 20%
100
%
references
https://www.mpc.edu/home/sh
owdocument?id=12632