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Elements of Non- Fiction By Mr. Cotton

Elements of Non-Fiction

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Elements of Non-Fiction. By Mr. Cotton. NONFICTION. Nonfiction is writing about real people, places, and events. Mainly written to convey factual information. Information may be shaped by the author ’ s own purpose and attitudes. Informative- factual information to inform - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Elements of Non-Fiction

Elements of Non-Fiction

By Mr. Cotton

Page 2: Elements of Non-Fiction

NONFICTION

Nonfiction is writing about real people, places, and events.

Mainly written to convey factual information.

Information may be shaped by the author’s own purpose and attitudes.

Page 3: Elements of Non-Fiction

Two Categories of Nonfiction

Informative- factual information to inform

examples: magazines, pamphlets, encyclopedias, textbooks

Literary- actual places and true events

Page 4: Elements of Non-Fiction

Autobiography

A true story about a person’s life told by that person (usually a book)

Page 5: Elements of Non-Fiction

Biography

A true story of a person’s life as told by someone else, a biographer writes it

Page 6: Elements of Non-Fiction

Essay

A short piece of nonfiction writing that deals with one subject

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Types of Essay

Persuasive Personal Narrative

Expository Descriptive

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Persuasive Essay

Writer tries to convince a reader to share a belief, agree with an opinion, or to take some action.

1. Facts are selected and arranged in a way to get readers to share a writer’s opinion.

2. Examples: newspaper editorial, political speech

Page 9: Elements of Non-Fiction

Expository Essay

Writer’s primary purpose is to convey or explain information.

1. Facts are used as neutrally as possible 2. Examples: report on a scientific discovery,

instructions

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Personal Essay

Expresses a writer’s thoughts, feelings, or opinions on a subject; usually written in an informal, conversational style.

Page 11: Elements of Non-Fiction

Descriptive Essay

Writer tries to recreate a person, place, or event mostly through language that appeals to the senses.

* Examples: traveler’s journal, autobiographical essay of a hometown

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Narrative Essay

Writer’s purpose is to relate a series of events, usually in chronological order.

Has the form of a story (often with characters and dialogue)

Examples: historical essay, account of a soccer game

Page 13: Elements of Non-Fiction

Thesis

Theme of an essay. 1. In narrative nonfiction (like

biographies), theme is a perception about life

2. In no narrative fiction (like essays), theme is the main idea or opinion the writer wants the reader to understand

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Objective versus Subjective Writing

1. Objective: facts, which can be proved to be true by the senses, the calendar, or the clock

* Examples: the geographic location of a city, the time of day 2. Subjective: details that may be true, but are verifiable only

by reference to your own state of mind a. Examples: feelings about an event, description of a person b. Word connotation (associations that affect meaning

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Strategies for Nonfiction Reading

1. Preview 2. Figure out the organization 3. Separate FACT and OPINION 4. Question???? 5. Predict 6. Build 7. Evaluate

Page 16: Elements of Non-Fiction

1. Preview

Skim selection to get an idea of what it’s about by looking at title, pictures diagrams, subtitles, and terms you see in boldface

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2. Figure out the Organization

Chronological order or how the work is arranged

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3. Separate Fact and Opinion

FACTS- statements that can be proven

OPINION- statements that cannot be proven

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4. Question

Why did things happen the way they did? Do you share the writer’s opinion?

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5. Predict

What will happen next? What will the author say about an issue?

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6. Build

Add new information to what you already know, and see if your ideas or opinions change.

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7. Evaluate

Form opinions about people, events, and ideas. Decide whether or not you like the way a piece is written.

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Intended Audience

The type of people who would like this genre of writing.

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Author’s Purpose

Entertain Persuade Inform