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Literacy Narrative

This guide includes the main points and organizational strategies that may be included in completing a Literacy Narrative essay.

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Why Literacy Matters

Literacy is experience, competency, and skill in communication. Literacy begins with language acquisition; learning words and speaking is the earliest form of productive communication. Developing listening and reading comprehension is classified as receptive communication. The acquisition of writing skills is a form of productive communication. Both types of communication are tools for learning. The definition of literacy has evolved through cultural change from oral, reading, and writing to include visual, musical, technical, numeracy, and information literacies.

To describe literacy, what other literacies would you include that facilitate learning?

Literacy Narrative Definition

A literacy narrative is a type of autobiographical essay that often tells the story of learning to read or write. It is reflective writing that describes the process and growth of learning. Narratives are a way of telling a personal story through remembrance and introspection.

Remembrance, Introspection, and Writing

A literacy narrative is based on life events. This means it is your experience of literacy, you may or may not love to read and write. Tell your story. To describe what you experienced, consider how to include specific details, who, what, when, where, why, and how.

  • Who taught you?
  • What changed or made an impact on learning?
  • Recount a memory of the time when developing literacy made a difference.
  • To describe where may include a place and/or an emotional state.
  • Explain why it matters.
  • Describe how literacy met a want or need and/or how it worked out.

Elements of Skillful Writing

Telling the Story

  • Describe the setting of a main event.
  • Blend in sensory images of sights, sounds, textures, smells, and tastes that manifest a personal experience.
  • Incorporate dialogue, including what was said can add an emotional connection to a narrative.
  • Include situations that build the plot: introduction, challenge, complication, inspiration, revelation, resolution to organize and add interest.

Organization Strategies

Stories are most often told in chronological order. Consider if that is the best way to tell the story.

  • Chronologically, from beginning to end.
  • Start in the middle.
  • Start at the end.

Direction and Expectation

Read your assignment and rubric to note the criteria, markers of quality, and rating scale and scoring before brainstorming your approach to the literacy narrative.

  • If the assignment and rubric do not make clear what the professor expects, take the opportunity to ask questions.
  • Typical criteria include writing style, focus, length, and due date(s).
  • Typical quality markers include clear language and error-free, consistent organization, context, audience, purpose, evaluation, critical thinking.
  • Typical rating scale may include how criteria determines elements of the narrative from mastery to inadequate.