c/c_Composition_Grade 12_Text features and structures form, function, and genre of textsnarrative structures found in First Peoples textsprotocols related to the ownership of First Peoples oral texts

Subject
Grade
Concept/Content
Text features and structures
  • form, function, and genre of texts
  • narrative structures found in First Peoples texts
  • protocols related to the ownership of First Peoples oral texts
Elaboration
elements of the text that are not considered the main body. These may include typography (bold, italic, underlined), font style, guide words, key words, titles, diagrams, captions, labels, maps, charts, illustrations, tables, photographs, and sidebars/text boxes.
refers to the way the author organizes text
Within a type of communication, the writer, speaker, or designer chooses a form based on the purpose of the piece. Common written forms include narrative, journal, procedural, expository, explanatory, news article, e-mail, blog, advertisements, poetry, novel, and letter.
the intended purpose of a text
literary or thematic categories (e.g., adventure, fable, fairy tale, fantasy, folklore, historical, horror, legend, mystery, mythology, picture book, science fiction, biography, essay, journalism, manual, memoir, personal narrative, speech)
for example, circular, iterative, cyclical
First Peoples stories often have protocols for when and where they can be shared, who owns them, and who can share them.
keywords
Text features
structures
form
function
genre
narrative structures found in First Peoples texts
protocols related to the ownership of First Peoples oral texts