How do you feel when you're with your friends and family? Answer this question and more about feelings by filling in the blanks to complete the sentences.
In this sixth-grade worksheet, students hone their narrative writing skills by practicing identifying and removing irrelevant details to strengthen a story.
In this worksheet, learners come to better understand the different kinds of narratives, and how they are similar and different, by creating a map of narrative genres.
What if your child were President? Get your learner's political mind pumping with a writing activity about what they would do as President of the United States.
Help your students solidify their use of transition words with this cute version of the classic ugly duckling story. By helping to fill in the missing transition words throughout the narrative, students will flex their sequencing and organization skills.
Students can start a personal narrative with a clear problem and solution by using this activity to organize their story. This handy graphic organizer will have students consider various aspects of their problem and solution, and how it made them feel.
What was the very first toy you played with when you were a baby? Answer this question and more by filling in the blanks to answer the questions about toys.
Stories are a great way to get your kids excited to write, and our narrative writing worksheets and printables make it easy to teach essential storytelling skills. With activities suited for young writers of all ages, these narrative writing worksheets provide practice in creating characters, sequencing events in logical order, and plenty of creative writing prompts to spark your students' imaginations!