Lesson 6: Write About a Picture Story

✍️ WRITING (40 Lessons)🟢 A. Building Sentences and Paragraphs

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Objective

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

Tip: Before writing, look carefully. Ask: Who? What? Where? When? What happened first/next?

Mini-lesson — Turn a picture into sentences

  1. Observe: Notice who is in the picture, what they do, and where/when it happens.
  2. Sequence words: Use first, next, then, finally to show order.
  3. Complete sentences: Start with a capital and end with . ! ?.
  4. Stay on one topic: All sentences should match the picture story.
  5. Check flow: Read aloud and fix any sentence that feels out of order.

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
Tracing snapshot for print

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.

Firstweuntanglethestring.
Nextthewindbeginstoblow.
Thenwerunacrossthegrass.
Thekiteliftsintothesky.
Finallywesmileandcheer.
Ourtopicsentencetellswhatthepicturestoryisabout.
Detailsentencesexplainwhathappensinorder.
Usecapitallettersatthebeginningofeachsentence.
Endeachsentencewithaperiodexclamationmarkorquestionmark.
Usefirstnextthenfinallytoshowsequence.
Addsmalldetailstohelpreadersseetheaction.
Finallycheckthatallsentencesmatchthesamestory.

Quick Check (15 questions)

1) Which sentence best begins a picture story about flying a kite?

2) Which word shows sequence?

3) Pick the complete sentence.

4) Where should the end mark go?

5) Which sentence uses a capital correctly?

6) Best order for these ideas: (run, untangle, cheer)

7) Which belongs in a kite story?

8) Which connector helps the middle of the story?

9) Choose the sentence that adds a helpful detail.

10) Which belongs at the end of the story?

11) Which sentence stays on topic?

12) Which is a complete thought?

13) What should you do if a sentence doesn’t fit?

14) Which shows sequence best?

15) Which closing makes sense?

Assessment (parent/teacher)

Exit ticket (student)

I will practice…

Lesson 7 →