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Author’s purpose

Author’s purpose. Identifying and practicing with finding author’s purpose. Review: What is author’s purpose? . Write this on your “white board”; write it on the yellow side if you are unsure and one the green side if you are sure. Author’s purpose: why the author writes the piece. .

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Author’s purpose

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  1. Author’s purpose Identifying and practicing with finding author’s purpose

  2. Review: What is author’s purpose? • Write this on your “white board”; write it on the yellow side if you are unsure and one the green side if you are sure. • Author’s purpose: why the author writes the piece.

  3. Different purposes • Authors write to… • Inform • Teach • Entertain • Persuade

  4. Identify purpose • It was a glorious morning in Alabama. The sun was shining through the trees. Alan couldn't wait to find his fishing pole and call his friend Sam to go fishing. They had a great time on these early morning fishing trips. They took their dogs with them and the dogs would swim in the lake while they fished. It was so funny to watch those dogs paddle around the lake. ENTERTAIN

  5. Identify Purpose • The Slim-O-Matic will cause you to loose pounds and inches from your body in one month. This amazing machine helps you to exercise correctly and provides an easy video to show you the proper way to exercise. Send $75.99 and begin exercising today. PERSUADE

  6. Identify Purpose • The Underground Railroad was a secret organization which helped slaves escape to freedom. Many slaves were able to escape because of the conductors and station masters. The northern states were free states and slaves were free once they arrived in the north. Secret codes and signals were used to identify the conductors and station masters. INFORM

  7. Review: What is Satire? • a form of social commentary (can be protest) that ridicules something in order to INSPIRE CHANGE

  8. To make it SATIRE one must… • Have a point • Want to inspire change

  9. THUS! The author’s purpose in a parody/satire is… • To ENTERTAIN • To PERSUADE

  10. Dora the Conquistador Dolls (P3) • Read this article to yourself and highlight anything that might be following the purpose • TO ENTERTAIN

  11. To Persuade • What does this ridicule? • “Dora the Explorer” • Why are they ridiculing it? • It is humorous (to entertain) • It is familiar (most know about it) • It connects modern “conquests” to former “conquests” • What are they trying to convince you? • Consumerism is slightly out of control • Conquistadors are falsely heroized.

  12. How do you know the MAIN purpose? • For it to be satire…it must inspire a change in: • Mentality • Action

  13. Explorers can be seen in different ways:

  14. Narratives Accounts • tell the story of real-life events • useful to historians and other researchers as primary or secondary sources

  15. Primary sources • Firsthand accounts: created by people who lived through significant historical events. • oftenbiased: may reflect the writer’s personal “slant” or one-sided perspective.

  16. Secondary sources • Secondhand accounts: written by people who researched the events but did not directly witness or experience them. • more objective: may lose immediacy and accuracy.

  17. Two we’ll look at • Narrative Account • Journal • Primary or Secondary?

  18. Names to Know • Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca • García Lopez de Cardenas • Christopher Columbus

  19. Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca • Exploration narrative writer: “A Journey Through Texas” • Journey through FL (2nd command) • Unfriendly conditions=Shipwreck on the way to Mexico. • 60 men survived • Washed upon the shore at Galveston, TX. • 15 lived through the winter • 3 survived to the end of the journey (18 months of wandering) • Journey sparked exploration of Texas. • Always encouraged others to explore America

  20. García Lopez de Cardenas • Credited with being the first European to explore the Grand Canyon (1540) • Searching of “Cibola”—stationed near what was rumored to be one of the 7 cities of gold. • Was dispatched on a mission to find a great river • Found it • Couldn’t get to it

  21. Christopher Columbus • Originally from Genoa, Italy. • Explored from a young age—had bigger dreams • Petitioned Portugal for the funds • Turned him down • Petitioned Spain • King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella accepted • Left in 1492.

  22. Think of a time when you explored something. This can be a new place, a new school, a new store, a purse, a subject, anything that you explored. What did you explore? Where were you? What was the purpose of your exploration? Did you learn anything new? What are some of the details of your exploration? A narrative can encompass any type of exploration!

  23. In what way can narrative accounts be seen as a timeless art?

  24. What’s the purpose of an exploration narrative or journal? • Inform? • Teach? • Entertain? • Persuade? INFORM PERSUADE STYLE

  25. Author’s style • How they write what they write • Diction (word choice) • Emotion • Figurative language • Descriptions

  26. Diction: Signal words

  27. Comparing works

  28. Act 1 • With your group create the following chart and find details from the text

  29. Act 2 • Now, think about how these ideas are similar and different by creating a chart like this one

  30. Act 3 • Discuss the following question and then write your response in your notes. Make sure you have at least 3 supporting details to back up your response: • Which narrative do you think is more effective? Consider author’s purpose and style in your response (diction, word choice, verb usage etc)

  31. Diction: verbs Why do strong verbs help us SEE what’s going on? Find some examples in “Boulders Taller” and “A Journey”

  32. Consider as you read • Purpose • Style • Diction • Signal words • Verbs

  33. Columbus’ Purpose

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