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Beginning, Middle, and End Story Mapping Worksheet
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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).
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Information
Description
What It Is:
This is a story map worksheet. It includes spaces to write the title and author of a story. The worksheet is divided into three sections labeled 'Beginning,' 'Middle,' and 'End,' each with a large rectangular box for writing or drawing.
Grade Level Suitability:
This worksheet is suitable for grades 1-5. It's simple enough for early elementary students to grasp the basic structure of a story, while older elementary students can use it for more complex narratives.
Why Use It:
Using this story map helps students to organize their thoughts and understand the sequence of events in a story. It promotes reading comprehension, narrative writing skills, and the ability to identify key elements of a plot.
How to Use It:
First, fill in the title and author of the story. Then, read the story and write or draw the main events that happened in the beginning, middle, and end of the story in the corresponding boxes. This can also be used to pre-write a story by filling it in before writing the full narrative.
Target Users:
This worksheet is beneficial for elementary school students, teachers, homeschool parents, and anyone looking to improve story comprehension or narrative writing skills.
This is a story map worksheet. It includes spaces to write the title and author of a story. The worksheet is divided into three sections labeled 'Beginning,' 'Middle,' and 'End,' each with a large rectangular box for writing or drawing.
Grade Level Suitability:
This worksheet is suitable for grades 1-5. It's simple enough for early elementary students to grasp the basic structure of a story, while older elementary students can use it for more complex narratives.
Why Use It:
Using this story map helps students to organize their thoughts and understand the sequence of events in a story. It promotes reading comprehension, narrative writing skills, and the ability to identify key elements of a plot.
How to Use It:
First, fill in the title and author of the story. Then, read the story and write or draw the main events that happened in the beginning, middle, and end of the story in the corresponding boxes. This can also be used to pre-write a story by filling it in before writing the full narrative.
Target Users:
This worksheet is beneficial for elementary school students, teachers, homeschool parents, and anyone looking to improve story comprehension or narrative writing skills.




