Can you share some tips with us?
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Transcript
- Maria
- Can you share with us some of your thoughts, how can Vita and Joy assist you, those entries are due in at the end of the school term, 30th June. How can we help you?
- English Teacher
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She does have problems finishing, I’m her English teacher so I tend to notice things like that. Lots of ideas but its hard to shape them into a really strong narrative.
- Joy
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Plot is what happens in a story, and if you don’t have something happening in your story you don’t have a story. Look at your plot and usually the curve of it, and usually the ending comes soon after that curve slopes down. When you can’t end a story, chances are you’re probably starting another story. You know children think of a plot in terms of a kind of a problem that gets solved. That’s what an eight year old told me once, and it’s a pretty good definition. We all have some kind of conflict, some kind of tension in your story which will get resolved. Shortly after the resolution you’ll probably have the ending that feels about right, and if you keep on going from there you’re probably going into another story.

