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Snapshot Challenge

Snapshot Challenge . Look at your sentence. Imagine that you’re looking at a photograph (or snapshot) taken at that moment. Use words to describe everything you can see in the snapshot. Thoughtshot Challenge. Look at your sentence.

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Snapshot Challenge

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  1. Snapshot Challenge • Look at your sentence. • Imagine that you’re looking at a photograph (or snapshot) taken at that moment. • Use words to describe everything you can see in the snapshot.

  2. Thoughtshot Challenge • Look at your sentence. • Imagine that people could hear everything you were thinking at that moment. • Write down everything that went through your head, and everything you though right then.

  3. Senses Challenge • Look at your sentence. • Write details to show every one of the senses: What did you see? What did you hear? What did you smell? What did you feel? What did you taste?

  4. Dialogue Challenge “ ” • Look at your sentence. • Imagine all of the conversation that went on at that moment. • Write down everything everyone said.

  5. Ba-Da-Bing Challenge 1. Look at your sentence. 2. Write one ba-da-bing sentence for that moment, with these three parts: where your feet are what your eyes see what you’re thinking

  6. The “Hook Challenge” Check your hook. Change or add one of the following to your introduction • 1. Dialogue • “ Hurry or you’ll be late!” called my mother from the bottom of the stairs. “Today of all days you want to be on time.” If I had only know what that day would bring, I would have stayed in bed. • 2. A Vivid Description • The sun was warm on my back as I raced toward the waiting yellow school bus. As I nestled into the worn leather seat I was greeted by the friendly voices of other excited children. The look on my face was one of confidence and contentment. With a jerk the bus rumbled down the road and I was on my way into one of the worst days of my life. • 3. An Onomatopoeia “Buzzzzzz!” The sound of my alarm clock droned in my ears as I struggled to come awake. With a start I sat straight up in my bed. This was my big day and I had to be on time.

  7. The Conclusion Challenge • Write a conclusion that ends your story.Tell the reader why this experience was important to you and what you learned from it. Refer back to the prompt. This should be the only time that you have referred to the prompt.

  8. Figurative Language Challenge • Look at your sentence. • Simile - comparison of two different things using the words "like" or "as." • I was so tired; I slept like a baby. • Metaphor - comparison of two different things that doesnotuse "like" or "as." • My life is a roller coaster. • Personification - giving human qualities to an inanimate object • I was so scared because the windcried in the dark. • Alliteration - beginning several words with the same consonant sound • I love living life to the fullest. • Hyperbole - exaggeration • I studied for a million hours and still didn't pass the test! • Onomatopoeia - words that sound that the sound they represent • BAM, buzz, hiss, BANG • Repetition - repeating a word or phrase for emphasis • Noone ever listens; noone ever tries; noone really care; no one

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