I can write 4–5 clear sentences about a picture story using sequence words
(first, next, then, finally), complete sentences (capitals + end marks), and fitting details that stay on one main idea.
Materials
Pencil ✏️ and eraser
Ruled paper or tablet
Tracing Pad (below)
Tip: Before writing, look carefully. Ask: Who?What?Where?When?What happened first/next?
Mini-lesson — Turn a picture into sentences
Observe: Notice who is in the picture, what they do, and where/when it happens.
Sequence words: Use first, next, then, finally to show order.
Complete sentences: Start with a capital and end with . ! ?.
Stay on one topic: All sentences should match the picture story.
Check flow: Read aloud and fix any sentence that feels out of order.
Video won’t be included when printing.
Guided Practice — Trace on the Pad
Trace these helpful words, then write a 4–5 sentence story about a picture of kids flying a kite in the park.
Sequence: first, next, then, finally
Actions: run, hold, lift, cheer
End marks: .!?
Outline idea: First we untangle the string. Next the wind blows. Then the kite lifts. Finally we cheer.
Tracing Pad
Drag & Drop — Build Sentences for the Picture Story
Use the chips to build clear sentences that could match a simple 4‑panel picture story (at the park with a kite). Keep punctuation at the end.