Lesson 37: Illustrate a Personal Story

✍️ WRITING (40 Lessons)🟠 E. Writing Projects

← Back to Level 2

Objective

I can plan and illustrate a short personal story with a clear beginning–middle–end. I will add simple captions/labels so my pictures match my words.

Materials

Tip: Sketch first. Use First → Next → Then → Last to keep the story in order.

Mini-lesson — Pictures that Tell the Story

  1. Plan 3–4 panels: one for beginning, middle events, and the end.
  2. Show actions & feelings: faces, motion lines, and setting details help readers see the moment.
  3. Add short captions/labels: a few words under each picture can tell who, where, and what happened.
  4. Match text to pictures: check that every picture fits the sentence next to it.
  5. Read it aloud: does it flow in order? Fix anything out of place.

Guided Practice — Sketch & Caption

Use the pad to sketch three tiny panels from a true moment (for example: “my first day at the park”):

  1. Beginning: Who is there? Where are you?
  2. Middle: What happened? Show the action.
  3. End: How did it finish? How did you feel?

Add short captions like “Arriving at the swings”, “Racing my cousin”, “We laugh on the bench”.

Tracing Pad
Tracing snapshot for print

Drag & Drop — Put the Story in Order

Drag the chips into the slots to build clear sequencing sentences that could caption your panels.

FirstIputonmyredsneakers.
Nextwewalkedtotheparktogether.
ThenItriedthetallslideandwaved.
BecauseIfeltbraveIclimbedagain.
Afterthatmycousinracedmetotheswings.
Welaughedwhenthewindwhooshedpastus.
Laterwesharedwateronthebench.
Finallywesaidgoodbyeandwalkedhomesmiling.
Mydrawingshowsthesettingofthestory.
Labelspointtopeopleandimportantobjects.
Shortcaptionshelpthereaderfollowalong.
Picturesandwordsmustmatcheachother.

Quick Check (15 questions)

1) What should pictures in a story do?

2) A clear story has…

3) Captions should be…

4) Which shows sequencing words?

5) A label can point to…

6) If a picture does not match the words, you should…

7) Good illustrations show…

8) A story panel is…

9) Which is the best caption?

10) To show feelings, you can draw…

11) What helps readers follow the order?

12) Which panel should show how it all finished?

13) Pictures and words…

14) What can you do after drawing?

15) A label is best used to…

Assessment (parent/teacher)

Exit ticket (student)

I will practice…

Lesson 38 →