Chronological
order is a way of arranging information about events so that the
information is arranged in the same time order in which the events
occurred.
It is chrono- (a prefix meaning time) logical.
It is also mucho-threatening to students. I prefer to use the term
narrative string, which is less threatening and more
descriptive for beginning writers.
Narration is based on time order
When we tell or narrate something that happened we put the
events in time order. If you’ve ever heard a third grader tell about
what happened at school, you’ve heard why I say the chronological
format is a narrative string. It sounds like this:
I was going to the art room and Mrs. Bromley stopped me
in the hall and said where was I going and I said the art room and
she said didn’t I know art class is on Tuesday and I said yes but
Miss Wales wanted me to get the papers she left on the desk and
she said well I’d better not waste time and I think she’s awful
mean.
In a narrative strings, as the example shows, all the information
appears equally important, nothing is subordinate. The audience
must analyze the narrative string to decide what is or is not important.
Making an audience do that work is not wise. Doing heavy thinking
makes an audience testy. They know it is really the narrator's job
to decide what is important before she or he starts to babble.
However, once narrators decide what aspects of their narrative
strings are important, they can use time order to arrange material.
Often writers use narration in one paragraph or one section of
a larger work that follows a different structure. For example, an
analysis of a literary work would follow the persuasive essay format.
However, the plot summary would be a narrative.
When you need time order
We use time order for
-
Giving directions.
-
Describing procedures.
-
Explaining processes.
In each of those activities, the chronological order of events
is very important. Can you imagine trying to follow the directions"Take
two rights and a left, not necessarily in that order”?
Limitations of narrative strings
Time order does not provide the connections between ideas
necessary to convey a reasoned opinion. Since an essay must, by
definition, support a thesis, chronological order cannot be used
as the overall format for an
essay.
For example, a true personal story cannot be passed off as an
essay. That’s where most students wipe out when asked to write a
narrative essay. They write a narrative string rather than an essay.
Chronological
order is one of four common types of nonfiction strings discussed
in this series that includes alphabetical
order; numerical order; and
spatial order.
created 08-May-2008; updated: 07-Sep-2008