教員コラムBlog

  1. home
  2. 教員コラム / Blog
  3. 詳細 / Detail

How to Tell a Story

2023.07.03
Photo Credit: RetroSupply @ unsplash.com

Storytelling is part of all cultures. Being able to tell a good story either orally or through writing is a good skill to have. Most stories have a similar structure: 
• Beginning 
• Middle 
• End 
Stories also must have a central conflict. The conflict is the problem or obstacle your main character, or protagonist, is trying to solve or overcome. (The secondary character who opposes the main character is called the antagonist.) Ask yourself “what does my main character want?” Making it difficult for your main character to get what he or she wants provides the conflict. 

Beginning: introduction of the conflict 
Middle: attempts to solve the conflict 
End: resolution of the conflict. Does your main character succeed or fail? 

Your story should rise in a way that each obstacle placed in the way of the protagonist becomes more difficult to overcome until you reach the most difficult obstacle just before the story ends. The most difficult and exciting point is called the climax. Remember, the climax is always at the end of the story just before you reveal whether your protagonist succeeds or fails. 

When you begin to create or tell a story you must know the conflict. Also, it is helpful to know the ending before you start, even if you change the ending as you write. Next time you read a story, try to identify the conflict.

Below is a retold story originally told by Aesop. Can you identify the conflict? 

The Fox and the Crow

Once there was a crow that had stolen a piece of cheese. She was perched on a tree branch ready to eat her meal when a fox approached. The fox saw the cheese and wanted it. However, he couldn’t climb the tree to get the cheese. He thought for a moment and then called up to the crow. “Madam crow,” said the fox. “You have the most beautiful feathers—more beautiful even than a peacock or pheasant.” 
The crow turned her head and looked at the fox because she had never received such a compliment. “But alas,” continued the fox, “I have not heard your voice. I’m sure your voice matches that of a song bird, but since I have never heard it, how am I to know? If I could just hear you sing, I would proclaim you queen of the birds.” The crow wanted to show the fox that she had a beautiful voice to match her feathers so she opened her mouth to sing, dropping the cheese. The fox quickly picked it up and ran off.


Questions:

1. What are the three parts of a story and what is the element of each?

2. What is a protagonist? 

3. What is the conflict in the “Fox and the Crow?”


Scroll down ↓ for the answers















Answers:

1. Beginning: introduction of the conflict. Middle: attempts to solve the conflict. End: resolution of the conflict.

2. The main character who is trying to overcome the conflict or solve the problem

3. The fox wants the crow’s cheese but can’t get at it. 


戻る / go back

Related posts