Year 9
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Lesson details
Key learning points
- In this lesson, we will finish reading Samphire, and tracking the events against the components of the Narrative Pyramid. Whilst reading the extract, we will continue to consolidate our reading strategies. You will be provided with prompt questions to help you track your way through the text systematically. Feedback will be given at each stage. At the close of the lesson, we will return to our focus of considering how Patrick O'Brian's narrative follows the Narrative Pyramid in our reflection task.
Licence
This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.
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5 Questions
Q1.
What is samphire?
a fruit
a jewel
a tool
Q2.
What is the definition of an 'omniscient' narrator?
a narrator who gives an overview of their opinions on the characters
a narrator who knows the thoughts and feelings of the main character
Q3.
What does the man buy at the tobacconist shop?
cigars
peppermints
umbrella
Q4.
Molly says she wants to go back to the cliffs to get some fresh air - true or false?
true
Q5.
What is it called when a writer leaves clues in the text for things that will happen later?
flashback
plant
red-herring
5 Questions
Q1.
What is the term used to refer to the space and dynamics between characters?
lady on pedestal
positioning
staging
Q2.
What does catharsis literally mean?
to change
to complete
to contrast
Q3.
A narrative always has to give equal time to each of the 5 phases - true or false?
True
Q4.
Which of the following list are not an example of binary opposites?
active / passive
dark / light
good / evil
Q5.
The tradition of the Lady on the Pedestal is often criticised for doing what to the woman?
celebrating her
making her too powerful