Lesson 9: Write about memorable experiences

✍️ WRITING (40 Lessons)🟠 B. Personal Narratives

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Objective

I can plan and write a short personal narrative (5–6 sentences) about a memorable experience using a clear topic sentence, sensory details, transition words to show order, and a closing sentence that explains why it mattered.

Materials

Tip: Use time-order words (first, next, then, after that, finally) and sensory words (salty, crunchy, bright, chilly, echoing).

Mini-lesson — Make it memorable with details

  1. Choose one event (first bike ride, winning a game, a beach day, a science fair).
  2. Narrator & tense: first person, mostly past tense (I went, I felt).
  3. Show, don’t just tell: add sensory details and small actions.
  4. Use transitions to show order (first, next, then, after that, finally).
  5. Close with meaning: a feeling or lesson learned.

Guided Practice — Trace & plan

Trace key words, then plan a short narrative about a memorable day at the beach (or your own event):

  • Key words: topic, detail, first, then, finally, sound, smell
  • Example outline:
    1. Topic: Last summer I had an unforgettable day at the beach.
    2. Detail: First we set up our umbrella and felt warm sand on our feet.
    3. Detail: Then we jumped over waves and heard seagulls calling.
    4. Detail: After lunch, we built a tall sandcastle with shells.
    5. Closing: Finally, I watched the sunset and felt calm and happy.
Tracing Pad
Tracing snapshot for print

Drag & Drop — Build Clear Narrative Sentences

Drag the chips into the slots to make sentences that could fit a personal narrative. Keep punctuation at the end.

LastsummerIlearnedtoridemybike.
FirstIwobbledandgrabbedthehandlebarstight.
Nextthecoolwindrushedpastmyears.
ThenmydadcheeredasIpedaledalone.
AfterthatIcircledtheparkwithabigsmile.
FinallyIfeltproudbecauseIdidnotgiveup.
Thestadiumlightsflickeredandthecrowdroared.
Iheldthetrophyandmyhandsshookwithjoy.
Thesaltybreezeandcrashingwavesmademelaugh.
AtthefairItastedsweetpopcornandheardmusiceverywhere.
Becauseitrainedwedancedinpuddlesandsplashedourboots.
IntheendIlearnedthatbravemeanstryingagain.

Quick Check (15 questions)

1) Which sentence best starts a personal narrative?

2) Which detail is a sensory detail?

3) Best transition to show time order:

4) A personal narrative is mostly written in…

5) Which sentence adds meaning to the ending?

6) Which is the best topic sentence?

7) Which detail fits a beach narrative?

8) “Show, don’t tell” example:

9) Best transition to end a story:

10) Which sentence is off-topic in a bike narrative?

11) A closing should…

12) Which word is a transition?

13) Best way to fix: “I was happy. I won the race.”

14) Which sentence uses first person?

15) Which helps readers picture the moment?

Assessment (parent/teacher)

Exit ticket (student)

I will practice…

Lesson 10 →