Preview

Literacy Narrative

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
313 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Literacy Narrative
ENGLISH 101
Essay #1: Literacy/Personal Narrative

Length: 500 words

Due Date: Friday night, September 6th by midnight in the digital dropbox on Angel

Desired Learning Outcomes:

1. Understand our personal development as readers and writers or persons
2. Explore writing as a means of self-discovery
3. Choose the appropriate voice, diction, and audience for a personal literacy narrative
4. Use various invention, drafting and revising/editing strategies as needed
5. Demonstrate appropriate conventions of grammar and style of written English
6. Use technology effectively and correctly to complete the assignment

READINGS FOR PAPER:
1. Norton, Chapter 7: Writing a Literacy Narrative, Chapter 40: Narrating, and Chapter 57: additional examples of literacy narratives to be selected by the instructor 2. Quick Access Concise, Chapter 1: Understanding College and Other Writing Situations and Chapter 7a & c: Strategies for Writing Typical Kinds of College Papers ASSIGNMENT:
After completing the readings for this assignment, follow the guidelines in Chapter 7 of your Norton Field Guide, particularly pages 43-46. Additional tips on the writing process itself appear in the chapter, as well as samples from professional writers. As your text advises, follow these steps.
1. Choose a topic. A single event that you recall vividly would be a good choice. See the suggestions on page 43.
2. Consider the rhetorical situation, particularly your audience and stance. Your instructor will discuss conventions in more detail, but this type of writing does not require a formal tone and may use the first person (“I”). Grammar and format, however, need to be correct.
3. Be sure you understand the nature of narrating (Chapter 40) and have the kinds of details and stance that motivate and excite your readers. A good narrative always has an element of conflict.
4. Apply the information in your Field Guide on generating ideas, drafting, and revising

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In the section “Writing a Literacy Narrative” the four writers, Emily Vallowe, Marjorie Agosín, Shannon Nichols, and Sofia Gomez, all use a number of aspects in order to write a decent literacy narrative. The chapter begins by introducing four good examples of literacy narratives from each of the writers. However, the chapter’s main focus is not about the four examples. In the end of the chapter, a detailed list of key features regarding a literacy narrative is mentioned including the following: a well-told story, vivid detail, and some indication of the narrative’s significance. The thesis is that all of the key features will entail a well written literacy narrative if done properly. The author supports the claim by explaining that a well-told…

    • 232 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay 1 Literacy Narrative Overview of the Assignment In this first essay, you will be writing a what is known as a Literacy Narrative. You can approach this assignment in numerous ways, provided that you examine a specific moment in your own development as a reader and/or writer the only catch being that this has to be an experience you can revisit in some way (i.e., a book you can re-read, or an essay, story, poem, etc. that you wrote that you can still find a copy of to read). You could explore the issue from any number of perspectives the first time you read a book that you really enjoyed or the first time you felt good about something you wrote, or, on the other hand, the point when you realized you hated reading or when you became discouraged about writing (or when you decided you werent interested enough to try). The overall goal of the essay in other words, the thesis that youll be illustrating throughout is to communicate why this experience impacted you in the way it did and how you view it now, long after it happened. Has your view, or memory, of the situation changed Why or why not How does the experience still affect you as a reader or writer Note that this is not just a personal story dont just write about what happened, but about how you think it affects you and/or whether you think your memory of the situation is still accurate. Regardless of which approach you take, your essay should satisfy the basic requirements of the assignment, as described below. Evaluation The essay contains a sophisticated level of reflection upon the experience and its impact on your personal literacy. There is a clear thesis/direction for the essay that is apparent by the end of the introduction, and which is developed in the subsequent portions of the essay. Discussion and description are precise and relatable the essay speaks in concrete terms about concrete events, rather than vaguely or about abstract ideas that the reader may or may not be able to…

    • 522 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As a child, it is fair to say that I was raised by my grandparents. My earliest recollections date back to about the age of four. My grandmother managed an in home daycare with about ten students and 5 who would come after elementary school. It was open till 5:30 p.m. so I became quite familiar with the other students enrolled. Being that I was among the youngest I enjoyed the benefits of having twice the education as the other students. I would learn phonetics with them in class, and once they were gone, my grandmother and I would have special “reading sessions”. An activity I would profit from for the rest of my life.…

    • 384 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    My Literacy Journey

    • 922 Words
    • 4 Pages

    I’ve always had the desire to write beautifully, from penmanship to placement and flow of the words. I remember getting birthday cards from my Granny with elegant cursive writing. Attracted to the way each word blended so smooth and soft, I would get a piece of paper and mimic the slants of each word connecting each letter, more like one lowercase “l” after another, to the next. One day I’d be able to spell the words in my mind, and until that day I’d practice my “cursive” one squiggly line at a time.…

    • 922 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    English is not my first language. In fact, I didn’t learn it well enough to have a conversation until I was about 10 years old. I remember the embarrassment of being new to a country I called home after living in Mexico for years. Things changed quickly the first day of 8th grade. I remember being energetically greeted by a slender athletic man in his fifties in a muggy summer morning. The hum of the air conditioning as welcome sound as we found our seats in this room that smelled of being closed the last few months. His name was Mr. Goodman and he was, by most accounts, an “asshole.” This was a descriptor of which he was proud. Even the other faculty thought so. He was a strange man, but he had his reasons. Surprisingly, he was also one of the best teacher’s I’ve encountered to this day. He had a brutally visceral way of making you care about learning. His class would soon change the way I spoke English for the rest of my life.…

    • 872 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    My early literacy experience was not a big of a deal for me at an early age. When I was in school I always took a reading and writing course with a grain of salt, it was just one more class on my schedule. Literature did not really appeal to me in my early experience. I always think that why do I need to take a literature course in order for me to succeed in the future.…

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Duke, N., & Purcell-Gates, V., & Hall, L., & Tower, C., (2007). Authentic literacy activities for developing comprehension and writing. Reading Teacher. 60(4) 344-355.…

    • 763 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    My Literacy Journey

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Growing up in a bilingual household has affected my literacy journey. It affected my Spanish writing because I focused more on English. This course has helped me look at English literacy beyond the point of it being another credit to simply cross off my list. A specific reading from this course that I was able to really retain and relate to was Victor Villanueva's excerpt from Bootstraps: From an Academic of Color. Here he brought up several points that made me think differently about literacy and how it can affect my life now or even after college. “One professor said my writing was too formulaic. One professor said it was to novel. Another wrote: ‘nonsense.’ “ (Villanueva 112) I really like this quote because relating it back to literacy and my college experience ahead of me, it makes me understand that there will be times…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literacy Narrative

    • 983 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Typically, people think of reading when they see a novel or a short story, but I think of reading when I’m out on the baseball field. When I hear the word “reading”, unlike most people, I think of a green grassy baseball diamond at night, with the lights lighting it up, filled with fans in the stands. Believe it or not, I read all the time on the field. I read the ball coming off the bat when I’m playing in the field. When I hear the “ding” of the metal bat and hard, rubber ball colliding, I know that there is a chance I could make a great play. I can see the ball getting bigger and bigger as in approaches me. I read the ball coming out of the pitcher’s hand, picking up the spin as soon as I can so I can know when and where to swing to make solid contact with the ball. I even read people’s body language when I’m pitching. I can tell a lot about the batter by how he’s standing and the facial expression on his face.…

    • 983 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literacy Narrative

    • 1211 Words
    • 5 Pages

    I was assigned this essay and wrote a really horrible first draft, which was a closed form essay. After our meeting I built off of one paragraph that you told me was the closest to a narrative. I went back to the drawing board and just turned it more into a story.…

    • 1211 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literacy Narrative

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Literacy Narrative; Too Much to Say The problem that plagues the modern mind is a surplus of content. Increasingly in my generation, with the trend to binge on internet freedom, the average person has seen too much to be able to form a clear opinion. With an ever-changing fleet of perspectives invading one’s mind, it is as if one is screaming in a riot to try and convince themselves of their own opinion. The most influential instructor I’ve been lead by, a burly yeti of an English teacher/ wrestling coach; Aaron Cantrell, told me clearly one day that I ‘just had too much to say’. That was it; Eureka! He had struck the chord loudly enough for me to hear that it was made up of individual strings. When I looked down at the prompt he had thrown around the room, this leaflet that seemed daunting and futile, I saw that buried in the complex of Times New Roman, there was really only one question. There was one solitary string that needed to be voiced at a time to complete the chord the prompt requested. I only needed to have one idea at a time. Line by line, one string after another, I plucked each sentence out, and in the disarray of jumbled context and my grammatical errors; I heard a resemblance of harmony. With small adjustments in placement and a tune-up of fanciful synonyms, I began to hear the chord I wanted. ‘It takes bravery’ The Yeti-man proclaimed. ‘It takes courage to have an opinion and stick with it long enough to fully understand it yourself’. In a fit of fantastic allusions, to which I can show no decency to try and recreate, he said, ‘the secret is to believe what you say’. Now in a swirling mind, filled with today’s troubles, tomorrow’s worries, yesterday’s regret and consequential foresight, it’s hard to know who you really are. That’s the rub though, the practice; to alleviate the overwhelming amount of information that you’ve borne witness to, by taking a prompt one idea at a time. It’s all about figuring…

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    My Literacy Narrative

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages

    My memory of my how I became literate is and always will be a part of me that I will never forget. I suppose I heard the sounds around me and connected them with emotions. Crying, I noticed, got a quick response from my parents, and usually some food. My communication development was identical to every other child learning to talk. Listening. But everyone has a story behind their literacy. Mine was one day, when we were driving to the grocery store, with the radio turned on, my jam turned on. It was the ABC’s. This song was unexpected, not only because of its difference in the nature of the regular pop songs, but that it was a new song altogether. Nonetheless, I began to rock along with the catchy tune of the song. I longed for more and demanded it…

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literacy Narrative

    • 840 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Writing has always been my most difficult part of English. Reading, on the other hand, is something I could do all day; however, with writing, I grimace just thinking about it. It was not that I did not have anything to say, because I actually have quite a bit to say. I just could never figure out how to phrase what I had to say in just right way on the page. My mom taught me to read and write at a young age. After that, I would devour any book that I could get my hands on. However, I have had trouble with writing since it became more than just my alphabet and numbers.…

    • 840 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literacy Narrative

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages

    As a youngster, most people are taught to read and write, yet about 17% of the world’s population is not literate. I am fortunate to be viewed as proficient in two world-wide spoken languages. Learning how to be literate in a new language can be extremely rewarding in the long run because it opens more career opportunities and is useful to be accepted in an academically advanced institution. For instance, being bilingual in English and Spanish has given me the opportunity to travel to the United States to receive a proper education in a safe environment. In order to reach the level of English I have right now, I had to go through several obstacles, including numerous classes…

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Narrative in Anthropology

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages

    As an avid watcher of US television series, I have always been a fan of the series Bones which is about forensic archaeology and forensic anthropology. In the show, the main character Dr Temperance Brennan is a forensic anthropologist who not only helps the FBI to crack murder cases, but also studies human remains of ancient times or victims of genocide. This show had deepened my understanding of the profession of anthropology and its strong connection to narrative. In Season 8 Episode 11 “The Archaeologist in the Cocoon”, other than the usual crime solving storyline, there was also a sub-storyline where Neanderthals and Homo sapiens human bones, thousands of years old were studied. It was revealed that it was probably the first mixed-race couple in history and that they could be victims of the world’s first hate crime. From the study, they were able to deduce many aspects of their life as a couple with their child, the one and only child from such mix. At the end of the episode, a convention was held where they told of the story of this family, of how they were forced to live in exile because the others could not accept them and of how the couple was killed and the mix-blood child starved to death as she was too young to feed herself. This episode was, in my opinion, an excellent illustration of how anthropology uses narrative to tell the story of life long lost in history. Just studying the bones do not tell us anything, because bones and human remains simply do not talk. Rather, it is on the anthropologists to put their findings into words and to share it with the rest of the world. However, this episode of Bones illustrates only a small aspect of narrative in anthropology and more will be discussed in the rest of this essay.…

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays