Lesson Plan: An Introduction to Creative Nonfiction

A Lesson Plan Geared for Upper Level High School Students that Introduces the Increasingly Popular Genre of Creative Nonfiction

Nicole Beck
Course: 11th/12th grade Language Arts

Lesson: Introduction to Creative Non-Fiction

*Note, students must be familiar with regular nonfiction before this will truly resonate with them*

Anticipatory Set: Have students read "Life is Precious, Or It's Not" by Barbara Kingsolver. This is an essay that can be found in Kingsolver's book of essays entitled Small Wonder.

Objectives: At the end of this lesson, students will understand the basics of what constitutes a creative nonfiction essay. Students will demonstrate their knowledge by analyzing the essay "Life is Precious, Or It's Not" by Barbara Kingsolver.

Procedure/Input: Teacher will define creative nonfiction as concisely as possible. "The weaving of narrative with facts and critical analysis." Examples can be given such as In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, One Writer's Beginnings by Eudora Welty, Small Wonder or High Tide in Tuscon are creative nonfiction essays by Barbara Kingsolver. On the board, teacher will write out the common elements of creative fiction and go through each one, explaining what they mean. The common elements of creative nonfiction are as follows:

-Flexibility of Form: Creative nonfiction can follow any form--essay, short story, even poetry.
-Literary Approach to Nonfiction: Use of literary devices like tone, dialogue and description.
-Self-discovery, Exploration: Creative Nonfiction is all about exploring an idea or issue, self disovery and exploration is a result of this.
-Personal Presence: the writer's voice creates an identity--usually themself.
-Veracity: conveying the truth, in other words including facts and critical analysis

Lastly, teacher will lastly explain what a creative nonfiction essay needs to accomplish. The creative nonfiction piece goes beyond a personal story and teaches the reader something, expands the readers thoughts, opinions, makes the reader see something in a different light.

Modeling: Teacher will give one example of "personal presence" from "Life is Precious..." Teacher will explain how this sentence is personal presence and how that affects the story. For example, in Kingsolver's essay she refers to herself as "I" and talks about "my friend." Use one example to show the students how she creates a personal presence. For veracity, anytime Kingsolver references a fact, historic event, or analyzes something on the basis of fact. Kingsolver lists Iraq, the Sudan, Waco--these are all examples of veracity.

Check for Understanding: Teacher will ask class for one example of "veracity" from the essay. One student to give a sentence from the essay, another to explain why it is an example of veracity, and a third to explain how it fits into the essay as a whole or what that means to the essay.

Guided/Independent Practice: Teacher will instruct students to go through the essay and label as many sentences of personal presence and veracity as possible.

Closure: Teacher will ask the class what they come up with and take as many answers as time allows, always discussing how they are examples and how they pertain to the work as a whole.

Published by Nicole Beck

I am a high school English teacher. I have also worked in daycare, career services, retail, tutoring and natural resources. My hobbies include writing, vegetable gardening, and cooking. My family life inc...  View profile

  • Introducing students to the complicated genre of creative nonfiction
  • Analyzing an essay with your class, specific examples from the essay "Life is Precious, or it's Not"
Creative Nonfiction involves using literary devices with nonfiction content. This is a great way to apply knowledge of both and combine them to create something new.

2 Comments

Post a Comment
  • kristian6/16/2009

    why oh why is there are something problem in your site..
    where are the topic that I want...

  • Laurie O'Hare3/25/2008

    Wonderful! When I took my creative non-fiction classes in college back in the mid 90's, it was just coming into its own in College. So glad and thrilled that it is making it into the high school curriculum. When I was in school, there wasn't even a fiction writing class to take. Very nice.

    I liked "In the Garden of Good and Evil"

Displaying Comments

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.