107 perfect bound pages Grades 2 and up Item CP-020 $29.95
This book is filled with meterial to help students learn about stories, listen to and retell stories and to make up stories on their own. Telling a Story is designed to help students understand the structure of a story.
Students see that story narratives have particular structural
characteristics. All stories include common elements that are
arranged in a predictable sequence. The second part of this book looks at the elements of a story
and offers plenty of material for practice and learning. Describing characters... Story starting ideas... Outlines for writing stories... Story-making events... Story titles... Pictures for story building...


Product Information Page
Telling a Story
The first part of the book addresses the story as a whole. Stories
are presented along with guides for retelling these stories. Components
of each story are identified and broken into steps that follow
typical story structure.


What skills are need for comprehending and telling stories?
Sequencing events...

Understanding experiences from different points of view...

Inferring -
drawing conclusions within stories...

Hundreds of words are presented describing physical appearance,
personality traits and characters' feelings along with activities.

Describing the setting...
Words denoting places and time are presented along with support
activities.

Inference...
Drawing conclusion through inference is once again addressed.
Here students simply identify characters and settings using clues
presented. The last page of this section is a "reverse inference"
activity where the student is given a description of characters
and settings then is asked to genernate a simple narrative describing
the characters and settings.

Introducing story beginnings...
Stories begin when events occur which upset the equibrium (characters
in time and place carrying out activities as expected) and evoke
reactions from the characters. These two pages deal with events
that might begin a story.

Characters' feelings in response to initiating events...
Students should be encouraged to associate a character's reaction
with the iniating event of a story. It is this reaction - the
character's feeling toward the event and consequences - that determines
the direction of the story as the character attempts to move toward
resolution.

Characters' attempts or desires to resolve conflict...
Finally, Part II addresses the attempts, plans or desires to return
to a state of equilibrium resolving the problem. At this point
students should have a grasp of how characters, settings, initiating
events, feelings and attempts at resolution are related. From
here, the story moves toward an end, leaving the characters with
a lesson learned.

Finally, students are challanged to write their own stories. They'll
find plenty of ideas and materials in the last part of this book...



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