Unit Checkpoint
What You Learned
Congratulations! You have finished the Narrative Writing unit. Let us review what you learned:
Unit Summary
- Story Beginnings: How to start a story and introduce characters and setting
- Story Endings: How to wrap up a story in a satisfying way
- Text Practice: Using time words (First, Then, Next, Finally) to organize a story
- Writing Application: Planning and writing complete stories with details
- Editing Workshop: Checking and fixing your writing
Key Skills
- Every story has a beginning, middle, and end
- Use time words to help readers follow your story
- Add details to make your story interesting
- Start sentences with capital letters
- End sentences with periods, question marks, or exclamation points
- Edit your work to make it better
Checkpoint Activities
Complete these activities to show what you know about narrative writing.
Part 1: Story Parts
Label each part of this story as Beginning, Middle, or End:
_______________ : Finally, the bunny found its way home and hopped into its cozy burrow.
_______________ : A little brown bunny lived near a big oak tree.
_______________ : Then the bunny hopped through the forest looking for carrots. Next, it got lost!
Part 2: Time Words
Fill in the correct time word: First, Then, Next, Finally
_______________, I woke up early.
_______________, I brushed my teeth.
_______________, I ate breakfast.
_______________, I went to school.
Part 3: Add Details
Make these sentences better by adding details:
1. The dog ran. → ________________________________
2. I ate lunch. → ________________________________
3. We played. → ________________________________
Part 4: Fix the Mistakes
Rewrite this story with correct capitals and punctuation:
first me and my sister went to grandmas house then we baked cookies they were yummy finally we went home
Part 5: Finish the Story
Read this story beginning and middle. Write an ending.
Beginning: First, Jake found a shiny rock in his backyard.
Middle: Then he showed it to his mom. Next, they looked at it with a magnifying glass. It sparkled like a diamond!
End: ________________________________
Part 6: Start the Story
Read this story middle and end. Write a beginning.
Beginning: ________________________________
Middle: Then the wind blew the balloon away. Next, the girl ran after it. She jumped high but could not reach it.
End: Finally, a nice man caught the balloon and gave it back to her. She said thank you with a big smile.
Part 7: Story Planning
Plan a story about a fun day. Fill in the chart:
Who is in the story? ________________________________
Where does it happen? ________________________________
What happens first? ________________________________
What happens next? ________________________________
How does it end? ________________________________
Part 8: Write Your Story
Use your plan from Part 7. Write a complete story with a beginning, middle, and end. Use time words. Add details. Then edit your work!
My Story:
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________
Part 9: Editing Checklist
Check your story from Part 8. Put a check next to each thing you did:
- ___ My story has a beginning, middle, and end.
- ___ I used time words (First, Then, Next, Finally).
- ___ I added details.
- ___ Every sentence starts with a capital letter.
- ___ Every sentence ends with punctuation.
- ___ I checked my spelling.
- ___ My story makes sense.
Part 10: Self-Reflection
Think about your writing. Answer these questions:
1. What is your favorite part of writing stories? ________________________________
2. What is still hard for you? ________________________________
3. What will you practice more? ________________________________
Check Your Understanding
Answer these review questions.
1. What are the three parts of a story?
a) First, Last, End b) Beginning, Middle, End c) Start, Stop, Go
2. Which word helps you tell what happened last?
a) First b) Then c) Finally
3. What do details do for a story?
a) Make it shorter b) Help readers see and feel the story c) Make it confusing
4. Every sentence must start with:
a) A small letter b) A capital letter c) A number
5. What should you do after you write a story?
a) Throw it away b) Edit it to make it better c) Never look at it again
6. Which sentence has correct punctuation?
a) I like pizza b) I like pizza. c) i like pizza.
Next Steps
Great job finishing this unit! Here is what you can do next:
- Keep writing stories at home
- Share your stories with family and friends
- Read lots of books to see how other authors write stories
- Move on to the next ELA unit to keep learning!
Writer's Challenge
Try to write one short story every week. Keep them in a special folder to see how much you improve!