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Narrative Adventures Unleashed

English • 60 • 13 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
60
13 students
9 July 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 12 in the unit "Narrative Adventures Unleashed". Lesson Title: Introduction to Narrative Writing Lesson Description: Students will explore the elements of narrative writing, including characters, setting, and plot. They will discuss their favorite stories and identify these elements.

Lesson 1: Introduction to Narrative Writing

Duration

60 minutes

Class Size

13 students


Curriculum Alignment: IE Curriculum Framework

Learning Area

English – Writing and Comprehension

Year Group

Third Class (8-9 years)

Relevant Learning Objectives & Competencies

  • EN3_3_W: Develop narratives using key elements such as characters, setting, and plot.
  • EN3_10_C: Engage confidently in discussions to express preferences and ideas about texts.
  • EN3_7_W: Understand the structure of narratives and sequence events logically.
  • Competency: Creativity and Critical Thinking – Demonstrate creativity in composing stories and critical thinking through discussion of narrative elements.

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  1. Identify and describe the main elements of a narrative: characters, setting, and plot.
  2. Discuss their favourite stories, articulating the key narrative elements they contain.
  3. Demonstrate understanding of how narrative elements work together to create engaging stories.

Resources

  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Story element graphic organiser handouts (characters, setting, plot sections)
  • Selection of short storybooks/fairy tales or printed excerpts familiar to this age group (e.g. "The Lion and the Mouse," "The Three Little Pigs")
  • Story element cards (characters, setting, plot)
  • Large blank poster paper for group work
  • Colourful pens/pencils

Lesson Structure

1. Engage & Activate Prior Knowledge (10 minutes)

  • Warm-up Discussion:
    Ask students to think about their favourite stories. Invite 3-4 students to share their favourite story with the class and briefly describe it.

  • Prompt Questions:

    • Who were the main characters?
    • Where did the story take place?
    • What happened in the story?
  • Write key words on the board under headings: Characters | Setting | Plot

Rationale: Activating prior knowledge aligns with NCCA principles by building on learners' experiences and engaging their oral language skills.


2. Explore Narrative Elements (15 minutes)

  • Using a well-known story (e.g., “The Three Little Pigs”), orally retell the story emphasising characters, setting, and plot.

  • After the retelling, break the story down explicitly on the board under the three headings:

    • Characters: Who is in the story?
    • Setting: Where and when does it happen?
    • Plot: What happens – beginning, middle, and end?
  • Introduce the graphic organiser handout for narrative elements. Show how students will use this over the unit to organise ideas when writing.

IE Curriculum focus: Building knowledge of text structures is essential for literacy competence (strand unit: composing texts).


3. Guided Group Activity (20 minutes)

  • Divide the class into small groups of 3-4 (4 groups total).

  • Provide each group with story element cards and a short printed story excerpt.

  • Task: Read the excerpt together and use the graphic organiser to identify the characters, setting, and plot.

  • Each group records their findings on large poster paper.

  • Circulate to support and prompt higher-order thinking:

    • Ask “Why is this character important?”
    • “How does the setting affect the story?”
    • “What is the problem or main event in the plot?”

Curricular link: Encouraging collaborative learning supports social competence and language development as highlighted in the IE curriculum.


4. Sharing & Class Discussion (10 minutes)

  • Each group presents their poster to the class.

  • Facilitate discussion highlighting differences or similarities between their narrative elements.

  • Highlight how different stories use varied characters or settings, but all have a clear plot.

  • Use questioning to stretch thinking:

    • “Can a story have more than one setting?”
    • “What happens if there is no clear problem in the plot?”

5. Reflective Individual Task (5 minutes)

  • Ask students to draw their own imaginary character and setting in their copybooks.
  • Write one sentence describing:
    • Who the character is
    • Where the story might happen
  • Optional: ask a few students to share aloud.

Assessment: Formative assessment through drawing and sentence to check understanding of narrative elements.


Assessment & Feedback

  • Formative Assessment: Observations during group work, class discussion, and individual drawing and writing task.
  • Use anecdotal notes to track understanding of narrative components.
  • Provide verbal feedback focusing on clarity of character and setting descriptions.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Support: Provide sentence starters ("My character is...", "The story happens in...") for students who need scaffolding.
  • Extension: Encourage advanced learners to think about conflicts or problems in the plot and share ideas.

Homework/Extension

  • Ask students to bring their favourite book or story from home for next lesson.
  • Encourage them to think about who the characters are, where it happens, and what the story is about for class sharing.

Teacher Reflection

  • Did students engage actively in identifying narrative elements?
  • Were group discussions meaningful and did they promote critical thinking?
  • Were students able to complete the individual task with understanding?
  • What adjustments are needed for upcoming lessons in the unit?

This lesson plan marries creativity with structured curriculum focus, fostering an engaging, collaborative, and reflective start to “Narrative Adventures Unleashed.” It encourages young learners to connect personally with stories while grounding them in key literacy competencies specific to the IE Curriculum.

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