Personal Narratives
TOPIC: Option #1: A Life-Changing Moment
Think of a specific experience that had a huge impact on you--something that really changed your life in some way (winning the state championship, riding your first roller coaster, surviving a car accident, going on your first date, etc.). Then, write a narrative about that experience. Make sure that it has an introduction, several body paragraphs, and a conclusion. Use time, dialogue, descriptive details, and one point-of-view to tell the story leading up to the climax of your life-changing moment. For instance, if your life-changing moment discusses your first date, the last body paragraph before the conclusion should detail your date and the previous body paragraphs should explain the events leading up to the date. The conclusion should sum up the major subtopics in your story as well as explain how this event changed you. For instance, did it teach you a lesson? Did you walk away with a new appreciation for something?
Sample Thesis Statement: “After I got to know John, I discovered that you should not judge
people on first appearances.” Your job after this is to tell the story of this thesis statement.
Remember to underline your thesis!
Please see the attached documents for more information about the assignment and a sample personal narrative essay.
Personal Narrative
This writing assignment involves writing your Personal Narrative. Once you draft your essay and
revise, you may submit it for feedback. The feedback will help you write the final draft; your
final draft will be graded.
Option #1: A Life-Changing Moment
Think of a specific experience that had a huge impact on you--something that really changed
your life in some way (winning the state championship, riding your first roller coaster, surviving
a car accident, going on your first date, etc.). Then, write a narrative about that experience.
Make sure that it has an introduction, several body paragraphs, and a conclusion. Use time,
dialogue, descriptive details, and one point-of-view to tell the story leading up to the climax of
your life-changing moment. For instance, if your life-changing moment discusses your first date,
the last body paragraph before the conclusion should detail your date and the previous body
paragraphs should explain the events leading up to the date.
The conclusion should sum up the major subtopics in your story as well as explain how this
event changed you. For instance, did it teach you a lesson? Did you walk away with a new
appreciation for something?
Sample Thesis Statement: “After I got to know John, I discovered that you should not judge
people on first appearances.” Your job after this is to tell the story of this thesis statement.
Remember to underline your thesis!
Option #2: Crossroads
We have all been in situations where we have had to make crucial choices--choices that
affected us in potentially life-changing ways (going back to school, buying a house, having a
child, choosing a college, etc.). Write a narrative describing this type of situation. Make sure
that it has an introduction, several body paragraphs, and a conclusion. Use time, dialogue,
descriptive details, and a single point of view to describe the situation, making sure that you
explain what caused it (suggested for body paragraph 1), what decision you made (suggested
for body paragraph 2), and how that decision impacted you (suggested for body paragraph 3).
In your conclusion, you will want to sum up your story and explain whether your choice was
the best one for you and why.
Sample Thesis Statement: “Moving out of my parents’ house was bad because I needed to
either buy a home or rent an apartment, and because a down payment for the home I wanted
would deplete my savings, I chose to rent an apartment.”
Formatting requirements are on the next page.
Header: Include a header in the upper left-hand corner of your writing assignment with the
following information:
• Your first and last name
• Course Title (Composition I)
• Assignment name (Personal Narrative)
• Current Date
Length: This assignment should be at least 750 words.
Format:
• Double-spacing throughout
• Title, centered after heading
• Standard 12-point font (Arial, TimesNewRoman, Calibri)
• 1” margins on all sides
• Save the file using one of the following extensions: .docx, .doc, .rtf, or .txt
Underline your thesis statement.