Write Sequenced Narrative Stories

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1st Grade ELA › Write Sequenced Narrative Stories

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1

Read this story: "At the Pool. First, I put on my swimsuit. Then I jumped in. After that, I dried off. I had fun!" Does it have an ending?

No

Only time words

Yes

Only details

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.W.1.3: writing narratives. First graders must recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure. Narrative writing tells a story. It has 4 parts: (1) EVENTS—tell what happened, at least 2 events in order that makes sense (beginning → middle → end). (2) DETAILS—tell more about what happened (who, what, where, how, feelings). Add information. (3) TIME WORDS (temporal words)—words that show order: first, next, then, after, after that, finally, last, one day. These words help readers know what happened first, second, third. (4) ENDING/CLOSURE—closing sentence that wraps up the story. Example: 'First, I went to the park (event + time word). I played on the swings (detail). Then I went home (event + time word). I had fun! (ending)'. Choice A is correct because the story does have an ending, as shown by 'I had fun!' which provides closure. Choice B is incorrect because the story does have an ending when it actually wraps up with a sense of closure. Students choosing this may have thought any sentence can be ending or not recognized the closure. To help students write narratives: Teach 4 parts explicitly. (1) EVENTS: Tell what happened. Need at least 2 events. In order: beginning → middle → end. 'I went to the park. I played. I went home.' (3 events in order). (2) DETAILS: Add information. Instead of 'I played,' say 'I played on the swings' or 'I played with my friend Emma.' Details answer: What did you do? Who was there? Where? How did you feel? (3) TIME WORDS: Use first, next, then, after, finally. These words show ORDER. Teach explicitly: 'First I [event]. Next I [event]. Then I [event]. Finally I [event].' Make word bank of time words. (4) ENDING: Wrap it up. 'I had fun!' 'It was a great day!' 'That is my story.' Use story map: Box 1 (First)=Beginning event + detail, Box 2 (Next)=Middle event + detail, Box 3 (Then)=Middle event + detail, Box 4 (Finally)=End event + detail + Ending sentence. Model: 'First, I went to the zoo (time word + event). I saw big elephants (detail). Next, I fed the goats (time word + event). They were soft (detail). Finally, I got ice cream (time word + event). It was the best day! (ending)'. Watch for: Students who list events without time words, students who tell events without details ('I played' without saying what/where/how), students who don't sequence events logically, students who stop without ending. Teach: Stories need TIME WORDS (first, next, then) and DETAILS (tell more!).

2

Read this story: "I Went to the Beach. I went to the beach. I built a sandcastle. I found shells. I went home." What is missing?

Events

An ending

Time words

Explanation

We check if stories use time words. This story tells what happened but doesn't use words like 'first' or 'then'. Time words help show the order.

3

Read this story: "I Lost My Hat. I lost my hat. I looked in my room. I looked outside." What is missing from this story?

Time words

Details

Events

An ending

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.W.1.3: writing narratives. First graders must recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure. Narrative writing tells a story. It has 4 parts: (1) EVENTS—tell what happened, at least 2 events in order that makes sense (beginning → middle → end). (2) DETAILS—tell more about what happened (who, what, where, how, feelings). Add information. (3) TIME WORDS (temporal words)—words that show order: first, next, then, after, after that, finally, last, one day. These words help readers know what happened first, second, third. (4) ENDING/CLOSURE—closing sentence that wraps up the story. Example: 'First, I went to the park (event + time word). I played on the swings (detail). Then I went home (event + time word). I had fun! (ending)'. Choice B is correct because an ending is missing—the story has events but no closing sentence that wraps up the story, like whether the hat was found. Choice D is incorrect because time words are not the primary missing component here, though absent; students choosing this may have not identified that the story stops without closure. To help students write narratives: Teach 4 parts explicitly. (1) EVENTS: Tell what happened. Need at least 2 events. In order: beginning → middle → end. 'I went to the park. I played. I went home.' (3 events in order). (2) DETAILS: Add information. Instead of 'I played,' say 'I played on the swings' or 'I played with my friend Emma.' Details answer: What did you do? Who was there? Where? How did you feel? (3) TIME WORDS: Use first, next, then, after, finally. These words show ORDER. Teach explicitly: 'First I [event]. Next I [event]. Then I [event]. Finally I [event].' Make word bank of time words. (4) ENDING: Wrap it up. 'I had fun!' 'It was a great day!' 'That is my story.' Use story map: Box 1 (First)=Beginning event + detail, Box 2 (Next)=Middle event + detail, Box 3 (Then)=Middle event + detail, Box 4 (Finally)=End event + detail + Ending sentence. Model: 'First, I went to the zoo (time word + event). I saw big elephants (detail). Next, I fed the goats (time word + event). They were soft (detail). Finally, I got ice cream (time word + event). It was the best day! (ending)'. Watch for: Students who list events without time words, students who tell events without details ('I played' without saying what/where/how), students who don't sequence events logically, students who stop without ending. Teach: Stories need TIME WORDS (first, next, then) and DETAILS (tell more!).

4

Read this story: "My Trip. I went to my grandma's house. First we ate cookies. Then we played a game. After that I hugged her." Does this story use time words?

It has no events

It has no details

Yes

No

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.W.1.3: writing narratives. First graders must recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure. Narrative writing tells a story. It has 4 parts: (1) EVENTS—tell what happened, at least 2 events in order that makes sense (beginning → middle → end). (2) DETAILS—tell more about what happened (who, what, where, how, feelings). Add information. (3) TIME WORDS (temporal words)—words that show order: first, next, then, after, after that, finally, last, one day. These words help readers know what happened first, second, third. (4) ENDING/CLOSURE—closing sentence that wraps up the story. Example: 'First, I went to the park (event + time word). I played on the swings (detail). Then I went home (event + time word). I had fun! (ending)'. Choice A is correct because the story does use time words, as shown by 'First,' 'Then,' and 'After that' to signal event order. Choice B is incorrect because the story does have time words; students choosing this may have not recognized temporal words like 'First' and 'Then'. To help students write narratives: Teach 4 parts explicitly. (1) EVENTS: Tell what happened. Need at least 2 events. In order: beginning → middle → end. 'I went to the park. I played. I went home.' (3 events in order). (2) DETAILS: Add information. Instead of 'I played,' say 'I played on the swings' or 'I played with my friend Emma.' Details answer: What did you do? Who was there? Where? How did you feel? (3) TIME WORDS: Use first, next, then, after, finally. These words show ORDER. Teach explicitly: 'First I [event]. Next I [event]. Then I [event]. Finally I [event].' Make word bank of time words. (4) ENDING: Wrap it up. 'I had fun!' 'It was a great day!' 'That is my story.' Use story map: Box 1 (First)=Beginning event + detail, Box 2 (Next)=Middle event + detail, Box 3 (Then)=Middle event + detail, Box 4 (Finally)=End event + detail + Ending sentence. Model: 'First, I went to the zoo (time word + event). I saw big elephants (detail). Next, I fed the goats (time word + event). They were soft (detail). Finally, I got ice cream (time word + event). It was the best day! (ending)'. Watch for: Students who list events without time words, students who tell events without details ('I played' without saying what/where/how), students who don't sequence events logically, students who stop without ending. Teach: Stories need TIME WORDS (first, next, then) and DETAILS (tell more!).

5

Read this story: "I Went to the Beach. I went to the beach. I built a sandcastle. I found shells. I went home." What is missing from this story?

A title

An ending

Time words

Events

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.W.1.3: writing narratives. First graders must recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure. Narrative writing tells a story. It has 4 parts: (1) EVENTS—tell what happened, at least 2 events in order that makes sense (beginning → middle → end). (2) DETAILS—tell more about what happened (who, what, where, how, feelings). Add information. (3) TIME WORDS (temporal words)—words that show order: first, next, then, after, after that, finally, last, one day. These words help readers know what happened first, second, third. (4) ENDING/CLOSURE—closing sentence that wraps up the story. Example: 'First, I went to the park (event + time word). I played on the swings (detail). Then I went home (event + time word). I had fun! (ending)'. Choice A is correct because time words are missing—the story has events and some details but no time words like first, then, or after to signal the order of events. Choice C is incorrect because an ending is present in the story, as 'I went home' provides some sense of closure, though minimal; students choosing this may have not recognized that the final sentence wraps up the story. To help students write narratives: Teach 4 parts explicitly. (1) EVENTS: Tell what happened. Need at least 2 events. In order: beginning → middle → end. 'I went to the park. I played. I went home.' (3 events in order). (2) DETAILS: Add information. Instead of 'I played,' say 'I played on the swings' or 'I played with my friend Emma.' Details answer: What did you do? Who was there? Where? How did you feel? (3) TIME WORDS: Use first, next, then, after, finally. These words show ORDER. Teach explicitly: 'First I [event]. Next I [event]. Then I [event]. Finally I [event].' Make word bank of time words. (4) ENDING: Wrap it up. 'I had fun!' 'It was a great day!' 'That is my story.' Use story map: Box 1 (First)=Beginning event + detail, Box 2 (Next)=Middle event + detail, Box 3 (Then)=Middle event + detail, Box 4 (Finally)=End event + detail + Ending sentence. Model: 'First, I went to the zoo (time word + event). I saw big elephants (detail). Next, I fed the goats (time word + event). They were soft (detail). Finally, I got ice cream (time word + event). It was the best day! (ending)'. Watch for: Students who list events without time words, students who tell events without details ('I played' without saying what/where/how), students who don't sequence events logically, students who stop without ending. Teach: Stories need TIME WORDS (first, next, then) and DETAILS (tell more!).

6

Read this story: "First, we saw the elephants. Next, we watched the monkeys. Finally, we got ice cream." What happens last?

We saw the elephants

We watched the monkeys

We got ice cream

Explanation

We find what happens last in stories. The word 'Finally' tells us the last thing. They got ice cream at the end of their trip.

7

Read this story: "My Birthday. First, my friends came. Then we played. After that, we ate cake. It was good." What does this story need?

No ending

Details

More events

Time words

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.W.1.3: writing narratives. First graders must recount two or more appropriately sequenced events, include some details regarding what happened, use temporal words to signal event order, and provide some sense of closure. Narrative writing tells a story. It has 4 parts: (1) EVENTS—tell what happened, at least 2 events in order that makes sense (beginning → middle → end). (2) DETAILS—tell more about what happened (who, what, where, how, feelings). Add information. (3) TIME WORDS (temporal words)—words that show order: first, next, then, after, after that, finally, last, one day. These words help readers know what happened first, second, third. (4) ENDING/CLOSURE—closing sentence that wraps up the story. Example: 'First, I went to the park (event + time word). I played on the swings (detail). Then I went home (event + time word). I had fun! (ending)'. Choice B is correct because details are missing—the story has events, time words, and an ending but no details like what games were played or what kind of cake to tell more about what happened. Choice C is incorrect because time words are present in the story, as shown by 'First,' 'Then,' and 'After that'; students choosing this may have confused time words with action words or not recognized temporal words. To help students write narratives: Teach 4 parts explicitly. (1) EVENTS: Tell what happened. Need at least 2 events. In order: beginning → middle → end. 'I went to the park. I played. I went home.' (3 events in order). (2) DETAILS: Add information. Instead of 'I played,' say 'I played on the swings' or 'I played with my friend Emma.' Details answer: What did you do? Who was there? Where? How did you feel? (3) TIME WORDS: Use first, next, then, after, finally. These words show ORDER. Teach explicitly: 'First I [event]. Next I [event]. Then I [event]. Finally I [event].' Make word bank of time words. (4) ENDING: Wrap it up. 'I had fun!' 'It was a great day!' 'That is my story.' Use story map: Box 1 (First)=Beginning event + detail, Box 2 (Next)=Middle event + detail, Box 3 (Then)=Middle event + detail, Box 4 (Finally)=End event + detail + Ending sentence. Model: 'First, I went to the zoo (time word + event). I saw big elephants (detail). Next, I fed the goats (time word + event). They were soft (detail). Finally, I got ice cream (time word + event). It was the best day! (ending)'. Watch for: Students who list events without time words, students who tell events without details ('I played' without saying what/where/how), students who don't sequence events logically, students who stop without ending. Teach: Stories need TIME WORDS (first, next, then) and DETAILS (tell more!).

8

Read this story: "First I got dressed. Next I ate breakfast. Then I brushed my teeth." What would be a good ending?

Next I ate breakfast.

First I got dressed.

I went to school ready to learn.

Explanation

This tests story endings. 'I went to school ready to learn' finishes the morning routine. It tells what happens after getting ready.

9

Read this story: "One day I lost my toy car. I looked under my bed. Then I looked in the closet. After that, I found it in the toy box!" Does this story have an ending?

No, it has no time words

Yes, it has an ending

No, it has no events

Explanation

This tests story endings. The story ends with finding the toy car. 'I found it in the toy box!' tells how the story ends.

10

Read this story: "First I went outside. Then I played." Which sentence adds a detail?

Then I played on the swings.

Then I played.

First I went outside.

Explanation

This tests adding details. 'Then I played on the swings' tells more than just 'played.' It says exactly what the child did outside.

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