A Literacy Narrative is a story/narrative that usually details a person's experience with Reading and/or Writing.
Usually a person starts at a young age but the writer of the Literacy Narrative has some experience under their belt which allows them the knowledge of types of forshadowing and also the creation of metaphor or symbolism.
Take "The Second-hand Bookseller" by Marina Nemat (From Prisoner of Tehran.)
The author is writing about a time when she was very young. So the opening paragraph is also filled with lots of things:
I attended an elementary school with vine-covered brick walls. This
was during the time of the shah. My school was a ten-minute walk
from home, so I walked there and back by myself. The old school
building was originally a two-story mansion, and my friends had
told me that the principle, Khanoom Mortazavi who had gone to
university abroad, had turned it into a school once she had returned
to Iran. Although every classroom had tall windows, because of a
few ancient maple trees that grew in the yard, it was always dark
inside, and we usually had to turn on the lights in order to be able to
see the blackboard. Every day, after the final bell, Sarah and I
would step out of school and cross the street together, but then she
would turn left and I would turn right. I would continue south on
Rahzi Avenue and walk past the tall brick walls surrounding the
Vatican embassy, past Ashna restaurant, which filled the air with the
smells of aromatic rice and barbecued beef, and past a small
lingerie store with a window displaying lacy, delicate nightgowns.
Without my mother dragging me along and telling me to walk
properly, I sometimes pretended to be a little white cloud drifting
across the blue sky, a ballerina dancing in front of a large crowd, or
a boat traveling down a magical river.
As you can see Nemat starts out describing her
surroundings—she paints a picture of a young
child, but she also throws in a little symbolism and
forshadowing which centers around her friend
Sarah and the Catholic Church and the change
brewing and predicted by the takeover by the
Ayotollah.
Most literacy narratives begin this way. This was
why I have you describe the setting for a bit before
you begin. That way you can show your age or
allows you to think a little about your past.
In may own Literacy Narrative I start out
describing the school I went to.
"Learning Astronomy"
Now I write a lot about kids that ride the bus and
the landscape of my school such as the woods. All
of this is foreshadowing, trying to show you how
dangerous it was in the 80's. There is even some
foreboding imagry of the school being
inescapable.
All of it shows my age and how the child of the
80's had little escape from Bullies and things that would not change until I was older.
In Rick Bragg's "All Over But the Shoutin."
Bragg describes how his father is living alone--he
is sickly and how Bragg is trying to forgive his
father. The setting is described and it foreshadows
his loneliness and regret.
Now in a Literacy Narrative the protagonist (That
is you.) Goes through Reading or writing and a
journey of discovery and at the end experiences
some type of emotion. That is why I asked you to
name the emotion in your outline.
In your outline you can name it. But in your actual
Literacy Narrative you have to show it. Both
Marina Nemat and Rick Bragg have experience
with Reading and Writing, and they describe in
detail how they were changed and showed what
emotion they experienced.
So now you will go through your project and
narrate what you did. Then you will show me the
emotion in the five ways we talked about. You are
not allowed to name the emotion—you must show
it.
Finally you will have to formulate an ending.
Today you are moving through your project.