Lesson Plan: Creative Writing and Storytelling

 

Learning Objectives

By the end of the unit students will be able to:

  • Understand the basic structure of a short story (beginning, middle, climax, ending)
  • Create interesting characters with names, appearance, personality and feelings
  • Choose and describe a clear setting (time and place)
  • Write a story of 200–300 words with a proper plot
  • Use dialogue naturally with correct punctuation and dialogue tags
  • Use sensory words and “show, don’t tell” technique to make writing vivid
  • Give and receive constructive feedback politely

Key Vocabulary & Phrases

Plot, character, setting, problem/conflict, climax, resolution, dialogue, dialogue tags (said, whispered, shouted, exclaimed, replied, asked), sensory words (sight, sound, smell, taste, touch), opening hooks, cliff-hanger, twist ending, storytelling phrases (“Once upon a time”, “Suddenly”, “All of a sudden”, “In the blink of an eye”, “Before he knew it”, “To his horror”, “Finally”, “From that day onwards”)

Materials Required

  • A4 lined and blank sheets, coloured pens
  • Story starter cards, picture prompts, emotion cards
  • Props box (old hat, scarf, toy sword, crown, magic wand, lantern, etc.)
  • Chart with dialogue punctuation rules
  • “Story Mountain” template (printable)
  • Rubric for final story evaluation (given below)
  • Soft background music for storytelling sessions (optional)

Detailed 8-Period Lesson Plan

Period 1 – What Makes a Great Story?

  • Read aloud a very short exciting story (150 words).
  • Class discussion: What happened first? Who were the characters? Where and when did it happen? What was the problem? How did it end?
  • Introduce Story Mountain on board: Beginning → Build-up → Problem/Climax → Resolution → Ending.
  • Students draw their own blank Story Mountain in notebook.

Period 2 – Characters and Setting

  • Activity: “Character in a Hat” – Teacher pulls random objects from prop box. Students instantly invent a character who would own that object (name, age, likes, fears).
  • Setting brainstorm: Show 8 picture prompts (enchanted forest, abandoned house, busy market, spaceship, underwater city, etc.). Students choose one and write 5 sentences describing it using senses.
  • Teacher models one example using “show, don’t tell” (instead of “She was scared”, write “Her knees knocked together and her teeth chattered”).

Period 3 – Beginning and Opening Hooks

  • Share 10 different story openers (question, sound, dialogue, action, weather, mystery).
  • Students write 5 different opening lines for the same picture prompt.
  • Class votes for the most gripping hook.

Period 4 – Plot and Problem

  • Story starter cards activity: Each student picks one starter sentence and writes the next 5 sentences, then passes to neighbour (exchanged 4 times → funny mixed stories are read aloud.
  • Discuss how every good story needs a problem/conflict.
  • Brainstorm list of problems (lost in jungle, magic spell gone wrong, new student feeling lonely, time-travel mistake, stolen treasure, etc.).

Period 5 – Using Dialogue Correct Dialogue

  • Chart on board with rules: → New speaker = new line → “Hello,” she said. (comma inside quotes, lowercase tag) → “Watch out!” shouted Ahmed.
  • Game: Teacher reads sentences without punctuation; students rewrite correctly.
  • Pair practice: Convert narrated sentences into dialogue form.

Period 6 – Storytelling Session with Props

  • Students work in groups of 4–5.
  • Each group picks 3 random props from the box and 1 picture setting.
  • They have 15 minutes to prepare a 3-minute oral story using those props must appear in the story.
  • Perform in front of class. Audience notes one thing they liked and one suggestion.

Period 7 – Writing the Full Story

  • Students choose their own idea (or continue one they liked).
  • Steps done in class:
    1. Fill Story Mountain planner (characters, setting, problem, solution)
    2. Write rough draft (200–300 words)
    3. Use at least 4 pieces of dialogue
    4. Include at least 5 sensory words
  • Teacher moves around giving individual help.

Period 8 – Peer Review, Editing and Final Submission

  • Peer review in pairs using 2 Stars and 1 Wish method: → Star 1: Something you really liked → Star 2: Another good thing → Wish: One polite suggestion
  • Students edit and rewrite neatly with title and illustration on final A4 sheet.
  • Best 8–10 stories are read aloud by the authors (voluntary).
  • All stories displayed on “Imagination Wall”.