Students must cut out the words and put them in the right order. They must also choose the correct ending for the verb (-s, -ed, -ing) for the sentence to make sense.
Students will be able to practice one style of how-to writing with this activity. The final product will show an age-appropriate visual representation of a recipe that uses basic temporal words. Students will have fun choosing and coloring their own ingredients for a taco. This cut and glue activity is also great for fine motor skills.
Students can decorate their blank snowman however they want, then use the temporal words first, next, then and last with sentence starters to practice writing the events in sequential order.
This cut and glue activity is excellent for hands-on practice with the butterfly life cycle, or recalling a sequence of events after a read aloud like ¨I´m A Caterpillar¨ by Jean Marzollo.
This sentence starter writing prompt is great for student self-awareness and expression. Students will think and write about things at school or home that they put a lot of effort into. This can be a great precursor to goal-setting, or as a self-reflection piece in a social-emotional lesson.
This writing prompt gets kids thinking and writing about their feelings, and identifying and articulating how and why they are either happy or upset. Great for self-awareness, self-control, and social-emotional learning in a whole-group or individualized setting.
What would you do if you were a pirate? Use this prompt to spark student´s imagination and creativity. Great for descriptive and creative writing lessons.
This writing prompt is meant to get kids thinking and writing about their favorite type of pizza, or to create a fantasy-style silly pizza. Sentence starter plus a blank pizza crust to decorate with the student's favorite toppings, or whatever they can think of. Great to use for opinion writing, or getting-to-know-you activities!
This writing prompt is meant to get kids thinking and writing about their friend, a familiar and exciting topic for kids of all ages. Works well with writing lessons on adjectives and describing sentences, as well as getting-to-know-you and community-building lessons.
After reading the book Bossy Bear by David Horvath, students can use their imagination to complete the comic of what Bossy Bear would (and should) say to his new friend! Great for lessons about making friends, being fair, and other classroom social situations. Students can then generalize that information to another comic-style situation.
This download provides two versions of the same worksheet for differentiation. Students can fill in the missing letter of the piratical words to practice decoding and recoding. Have fun!