I can plan and write a short story that has a clear beginning and a satisfying ending, using simple time words (first, next, then, finally) and keeping the story on one main idea.
Materials
Pencil ✏️ and eraser
Ruled paper or tablet
Tracing Pad (below)
Tip: Think of a small moment (one place, a few minutes). Shorter moments make clearer stories.
Mini-lesson — What makes a strong beginning and ending?
Beginning: Who is in the story? Where are they? What starts the action? Hook your reader!
Middle: Tell what happens in order with time words (first, next, then).
Ending: Show how it finishes or how the character feels. Use finally or a closing thought.
Stay focused: Keep all sentences about this one small event.
Read aloud: Does the ending feel finished? If not, add one more sentence to wrap it up.
Video won’t be included when printing.
Guided Practice — Trace on the Pad
Trace key words, then draft a tiny story (4–5 sentences) about finding a lost kite:
Key words: first, then, finally, because
Example outline:
Beginning: I saw a red kite stuck in a tree at the park.
Middle: I asked a grown-up for help and found a long stick.
Ending: Finally, the kite floated free, and I cheered.
Tracing Pad
Drag & Drop — Build Clear Story Sentences
Drag the chips into the slots to make strong sentences that could open or close a story. Keep punctuation at the end.