I can plan and write a personal narrative (6–8 sentences) about a real event using first person, time order words, vivid details, and a closing that tells why it mattered.
Materials
Pencil ✏️ and eraser
Planning sheet or notebook
Tracing Pad (below)
Tip: Use Beginning → Middle → End. Add one line of dialogue and one show-not-tell detail.
Mini-lesson — Turn a real event into a story
Beginning: Who, where, and when. Hook the reader.
Middle: What happened in order (first, next, then). Add feelings and dialogue.
End: How it was solved or finished, and why it mattered.
Show, don’t tell: Use senses and action words (my hands shook, the whistle blew).
First person: Use I, me, my to tell your story.
Video won’t be included when printing.
Guided Practice — Trace & plan your narrative
Trace these words, then draft a real-life story (6–8 sentences) about a time you overcame a challenge:
Key words: first, next, then, finally, because, felt, said
Example outline:
Beginning: I tried to ride a bike without training wheels at the park.
Middle: First I wobbled; next I fell; then Dad said, “Look ahead!” I kept trying.
End: Finally I glided across the path. I felt proud because I didn’t give up.
Tracing Pad
Drag & Drop — Build Clear Narrative Sentences
Drag the chips into the slots to form strong narrative sentences using time order and details.