Description
What It Is:
A visual story structure worksheet that teaches students the three basic parts of a story: the beginning, middle, and end. The worksheet includes clear explanations of each section and provides three large boxes where students can write or draw what happened at each stage in the story they just read.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps students identify story structure, strengthen comprehension, and improve sequencing skills. It encourages students to think about how characters, problems, and solutions unfold throughout a narrative. It is ideal for reinforcing reading skills and supporting young writers as they learn to organize their own stories.
How to Use It:
• Use after reading a short story, chapter, or picture book to help students summarize key events.
• Assign during ELA lessons on plot, sequencing, or narrative structure.
• Pair with storytelling activities where students map their own creative stories.
• Use as a reading comprehension assessment or literacy center activity.
Grade Suitability:
Best for Grades 5-7.
• Supports early literacy skills such as sequencing and retelling.
• Suitable for both whole-class and independent practice.
Target Users:
Designed for teachers, homeschool families, literacy tutors, and early elementary programs teaching story structure.
A visual story structure worksheet that teaches students the three basic parts of a story: the beginning, middle, and end. The worksheet includes clear explanations of each section and provides three large boxes where students can write or draw what happened at each stage in the story they just read.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps students identify story structure, strengthen comprehension, and improve sequencing skills. It encourages students to think about how characters, problems, and solutions unfold throughout a narrative. It is ideal for reinforcing reading skills and supporting young writers as they learn to organize their own stories.
How to Use It:
• Use after reading a short story, chapter, or picture book to help students summarize key events.
• Assign during ELA lessons on plot, sequencing, or narrative structure.
• Pair with storytelling activities where students map their own creative stories.
• Use as a reading comprehension assessment or literacy center activity.
Grade Suitability:
Best for Grades 5-7.
• Supports early literacy skills such as sequencing and retelling.
• Suitable for both whole-class and independent practice.
Target Users:
Designed for teachers, homeschool families, literacy tutors, and early elementary programs teaching story structure.
