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Creative Writing Course Outline

The course outline summarizes a creative writing course covering 4 main genres: poetry, fiction, drama, and creative non-fiction. In quarter 1, students will study elements of poetry like theme, tone, form, and techniques. They will also analyze elements of fiction like character, point of view, plot, setting, and techniques. In quarter 2, students focus on elements of drama and techniques used in playwriting. The course culminates in a final creative output where students can choose from options like contributing to a blog, crafting a collection of poems/stories, or developing a script.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
223 views

Creative Writing Course Outline

The course outline summarizes a creative writing course covering 4 main genres: poetry, fiction, drama, and creative non-fiction. In quarter 1, students will study elements of poetry like theme, tone, form, and techniques. They will also analyze elements of fiction like character, point of view, plot, setting, and techniques. In quarter 2, students focus on elements of drama and techniques used in playwriting. The course culminates in a final creative output where students can choose from options like contributing to a blog, crafting a collection of poems/stories, or developing a script.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Creative Writing Course Outline

QUARTER I

1. Creative Writing
1.1. Imaginative writing vs. technical / academic / other forms of writing
1.2. Sensory experience
1.3. Language
a. Imagery
b. Figures of speech
c. Diction
1.4. Sample works of well-known local and foreign writers

2. Reading and Writing Poetry*


2.1. Elements of the genre
a. Essential elements
a.1. Theme
a.2. Tone
b. Elements for specific forms
b.1. Conventional forms
(exemplar: short Tagalog poems like tanaga and diona; haiku; sonnet)
-rhyme and meter
-metaphor
b.2. Free verse
-the line and line break
-enjambments
-metaphor
c. Other experimental texts
c.1. typography
c.2. genre-crossing texts (e.g. prose poem, performance poetry, etc.)
d. Tone
2.2. Techniques and literary devices
(modeling from well-known local and foreign poets)

3. Reading and Writing Fiction*


3.1. Elements of the genre
a. Character
b. Point of View
b.1. 1st-person POV (major, minor, or bystander)
b.2. 2nd-person POV
b.3. 3rd-person POV (objective, limited omniscient, omniscient)
c. Plot
c.1. linear
c.2. modular/episodic
c.3. traditional parts: exposition, rising action, climax, falling action,
resolution/denouement
d. Setting and atmosphere
d.1. time and place
d.2. cultural, sociological, political, religious, etc. milieu
d.3. sensibilities that lead to specific modes
e. Conflict
f. Irony
f.1. verbal
f.2. situational
f.3. dramatic
g. Theme
g.1. moral/lesson
g.2. dramatic premise
g.3. insight
3.2. Techniques and literary devices
a. Mood/tone
b. Foreshadowing
c. Symbolism and motif
3.3. Modeling from well-known local
and foreign short story writers in a
range of modes

QUARTER II

4. Reading and Writing Drama (one-act)*

Elements of the genre


a. Character
b. Setting
c. Plot
d. Dialogue

4.1. Techniques and literary devices


a. Intertextuality
b. Conceptualization of modality
4.2. Modeling from well-known local and foreign playwrights

5. The creative work in literary and /or sociopolitical context


 produce a craft essay on the personal creative process deploying a consciously selected orientation of
creative writing

6. Final output**

 The learners may choose from any of the following:

1. Design a group blog for poetry and fiction


2. Produce a suite of poems, a full/completed short story, or a script for a one-act play, with
the option of staging
3. Create hypertext

Prepared by:
MARIE JOY R. GARMING
Instructor

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