Use Temporal Words for Event Order
Help Questions
3rd Grade Writing › Use Temporal Words for Event Order
Read Emma’s story: ONE MORNING, Emma noticed her library book was missing. She looked in her backpack. She checked her desk. She asked Jamal to help. They found the book by the reading rug. Which temporal word best shows that the third event happened after the second event?
BECAUSE
ALSO
NEXT
BEFORE
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Emma's story includes multiple events in sequence: noticing the book missing one morning, looking in her backpack, checking her desk, asking for help, and finding the book. The choice of temporal word 'NEXT' makes the sequence clear by signaling the third event after the second. Choice B is correct because it uses NEXT to show the event after the previous one. Specifically, 'NEXT' clarifies when checking the desk happens relative to looking in the backpack, helping readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice C uses an opinion linking word (because) instead of temporal, leaving the order unclear. This is common when students confuse temporal words with linking words for other writing types. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Marcus’s story: Marcus packed his lunch. AFTER he zipped his backpack, he ran to the bus stop. BEFORE the bus arrived, he waved to his friend. Which sentence uses a temporal word to signal when the event happened?
He ran to the bus stop because he was late.
After he zipped his backpack, he ran to the bus stop.
Marcus packed his lunch.
He waved to his friend, also.
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Marcus's story includes multiple events in sequence: packing lunch, zipping backpack then running to the bus stop, and waving to a friend before the bus arrives. The temporal word 'AFTER' signals when the running event happens in relation to zipping the backpack. Choice B is correct because it uses AFTER to show time relationship. Specifically, 'AFTER' clarifies when running to the bus stop happens relative to zipping the backpack, helping readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice C uses an opinion linking word (because) instead of temporal. This is common when students confuse temporal words with linking words for other writing types. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Maya’s story: IN THE AFTERNOON, Maya started a puzzle. FOR TEN MINUTES, she searched for corner pieces. THEN, her brother brought more pieces. AT LAST, they finished the puzzle. Which temporal phrase tells how long an event lasted?
THEN
FOR TEN MINUTES
AT LAST
IN THE AFTERNOON
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Maya's story includes multiple events in sequence: starting a puzzle in the afternoon, searching for corner pieces for ten minutes, her brother bringing more pieces then, and finishing at last. The temporal phrase 'FOR TEN MINUTES' signals how long the searching event lasted in the sequence. Choice B is correct because it uses FOR TEN MINUTES to show duration, a type of temporal phrase. Specifically, 'FOR TEN MINUTES' clarifies how long the searching happens within the story timeline, helping readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice A uses a temporal phrase but for when, not duration, which is too vague for the question's focus. This is common when students forget to signal time between events. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Jamal’s story: FIRST, Jamal filled a bucket with water. NEXT, he carried it to the garden. ___, he watered the tomatoes. FINALLY, he put the bucket away. Which temporal word should go in the blank to show the next event in order?
THEN
BECAUSE
BEFORE
ALSO
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Jamal's story includes multiple events in sequence: filling the bucket first, carrying it next, watering the tomatoes, and putting the bucket away finally. The temporal word 'THEN' signals when the watering event happens in the sequence. Choice A is correct because it uses THEN to show the event after the previous one. Specifically, 'THEN' clarifies when watering the tomatoes happens relative to carrying the bucket, helping readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice B uses the wrong temporal word for position (before would reverse the order). This is common when students think any order word works anywhere. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Carlos’s story: BEFORE recess, Carlos had his new hat. DURING recess, he played tag. ___ recess, he could not find his hat. Which word fits best in the blank to show the hat was missing later?
BEFORE
ANOTHER
THEREFORE
AFTER
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Carlos's story includes multiple events in sequence: having the hat before recess, playing tag during recess, and not finding the hat after. The temporal word 'AFTER' signals when the missing hat event happened in the sequence. Choice A is correct because it uses AFTER to show time relationship. Specifically, 'AFTER' clarifies that not finding the hat happens later relative to recess, helping readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice B uses BEFORE, which contradicts event order by placing it earlier. This is common when students think any order word works anywhere. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Yuki is writing a story about losing a bracelet. Which sentence correctly uses a temporal word to signal event order in the story?
FINALLY, Yuki started looking for her bracelet.
Yuki looked under the desk BECAUSE she checked the playground.
NEXT, Yuki checked the playground after she looked under the desk.
Yuki looked under the desk. She asked for help.
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Yuki's story includes multiple events in sequence about losing a bracelet, such as looking under the desk and checking the playground. The temporal words 'NEXT' and 'after' make the sequence clear by signaling order. Choice D is correct because it uses NEXT to show continuing sequence and after for time relationship. Specifically, 'NEXT ... after' clarifies when checking the playground happens relative to looking under the desk, helping readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice B has no temporal word, leaving sequence unclear. This is common when students forget to signal time between events. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Maya’s story: Maya searched the classroom for her missing eraser. ___, she asked Marcus to help her look. Marcus checked the pencil sharpener area. FINALLY, Maya found the eraser under her chair. Which temporal word fits best in the blank to show what happened next?
FINALLY
THEN
BECAUSE
ALSO
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Maya's story includes multiple events in sequence, such as searching, asking for help, checking the sharpener, and finding the eraser, and the blank needs a temporal word to signal the next event before FINALLY. Choice A is correct because it uses THEN to show the event after the previous one. Specifically, THEN clarifies when asking Marcus happens relative to searching and before the final discovery, continuing the sequence. This helps readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice B uses the wrong temporal word for position (finally too early before the actual end). This is common when students think any order word works anywhere. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Carlos is writing about a class trip. Read his story: Carlos got on the bus. Carlos visited the museum. Carlos ate lunch in the park. Carlos rode the bus back to school. Which sentence is missing a temporal word to show event order more clearly?
AFTER lunch, Carlos rode the bus back to school.
FIRST, Carlos got on the bus.
Carlos visited the museum.
FINALLY, Carlos rode the bus back to school.
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Carlos's story includes multiple events in sequence, such as getting on the bus, visiting the museum, eating lunch, and riding back, and one sentence lacks a temporal word, leaving the order unclear. Choice B is correct because it identifies the sentence about visiting the museum as missing a temporal word. Specifically, without a word like THEN or NEXT, it's unclear when the visit happens relative to getting on the bus and the later events. This helps readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice A has a temporal word (first) signaling the beginning, but the question asks for the missing one. This is common when students forget to signal time between events. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Emma’s story: ONE MORNING, Emma brought her new bracelet to school. Emma played on the swings at recess. Emma noticed her bracelet was gone. Emma looked under the slide. Emma found it by the fence. Which temporal word best shows the order of events by telling when the story begins?
Because
Also
Finally
ONE MORNING
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Emma's story includes multiple events in sequence, such as bringing the bracelet, playing, noticing it's gone, looking, and finding it, and the choice of temporal word signals when the story begins. Choice C is correct because it uses ONE MORNING to signal the beginning of the sequence. Specifically, ONE MORNING clarifies when the first event happens relative to the others in the story, setting the timeline at the start of the day. This helps readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice A uses an opinion linking word (because) instead of temporal, which fails to signal time or order. This is common when students confuse temporal words with linking words for other writing types. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'
Read Jamal’s story: FIRST, Jamal packed his lunch. NEXT, he ran to the bus stop. Jamal sat down on the bus. FINALLY, he arrived at school. Which word should Jamal add to the third sentence to show that event happened after “NEXT” but before “FINALLY”?
THEN
ALSO
BECAUSE
BEFORE
Explanation
This question tests 3rd grade narrative writing skill of using temporal words and phrases to signal event order (CCSS.W.3.3.c). Temporal words and phrases signal WHEN events happen and show the ORDER of events in a story. Key narrative temporal words: FIRST/At first (beginning), NEXT/Then/After that (continuing sequence), BEFORE/AFTER (time relationships), FINALLY/At last (ending). These differ from informative linking words (also, another) which connect facts, and opinion linking words (because, therefore) which connect reasons. Temporal words help readers follow the story sequence through time, making clear which event happens first, next, and last. In this scenario, Jamal's story includes multiple events in sequence, such as packing lunch, running to the bus, sitting down, and arriving at school, and the lack of a temporal word in the third sentence leaves the order unclear between NEXT and FINALLY. Choice A is correct because it uses THEN to show the event after the previous one. Specifically, THEN clarifies when sitting on the bus happens relative to running to the bus stop and before arriving, continuing the sequence smoothly. This helps readers follow the story events in order and understand the timeline. Choice C uses an opinion linking word (because) instead of temporal, which fails to signal time or order. This is common when students confuse temporal words with linking words for other writing types. This happens because students learn different linking words for different purposes (opinion, informative, narrative) and may confuse them, or may not understand that temporal words have specific positions (first for beginning, finally for ending). To help students use temporal words in narratives: Create Temporal Words Anchor Chart for STORIES: Beginning (First, At first, One day), Middle (Next, Then, After that, Soon, Later), Before/After (Before [event], After [event]), Ending (Finally, At last, In the end). Teach position: FIRST = beginning event, NEXT/THEN = continuing events, FINALLY = ending event. Distinguish from other linking words: NARRATIVE temporal (first, next, finally) vs INFORMATIVE linking (also, another) vs OPINION linking (because, therefore) — match word type to writing type. Practice sequencing: Give story events without temporal words, have students add appropriate temporal words. Model variety: Don't use THEN for every event; use First → Next → Then → Finally chain. Use timeline visual: draw line with events, add temporal words showing time relationships. Practice BEFORE/AFTER: 'Before school, she practiced. After school, she performed.' Teach common chains: First-Next-Then-Finally, One day-Later-At last, In the morning-After lunch-In the afternoon. Compare stories with/without temporal words to see clarity difference. Watch for: Using opinion words (because) or informative words (also) in narratives. Using FINALLY at beginning or FIRST at end. Missing temporal words between events. Overusing THEN repeatedly (vary: first, next, later, finally). Confusing temporal words for different writing types. Praise: 'You used FIRST to show the beginning event, NEXT for the middle, and FINALLY for the ending!'