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Creative writing and fiction worksheets

Identifying onomatopoeia worksheet

Identifying onomatopoeia

Onomatopoeia is when a word sounds like the noise it describes. Can you write a poem using onomatopoeia? Here are some subjects that you could choose from.
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Writing your own version of The Hare and the Tortoise

Writing your own version of The Hare and the Tortoise

Think of two of your favourite animals. What would happen if they ran a race? Who would win in the end, and why? Write a story about it!
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Writing task: Your first day back at school

Writing task: Your first day back at school

Can you remember your first day back to school this year? How did you feel? Did you have a new teacher? Can you describe your teacher? What did you do on your first day? Did you make any new friends? Write a few sentences to describe what your first day was like.
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Writing task: write as Goldilocks

Writing task: write as Goldilocks

Imagine you are Goldilocks. What do you do in the three bears’ house? Write your own version of the story.
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Writing task: My three wishes

Writing task: My three wishes

What three wishes would you make if you found a magic lamp? Write them down here.
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Writing task: finish The Magic Lamp

Writing task: finish The Magic Lamp

Can you finish writing the story about the magic lamp? What do you think happened after Matthew went swimming? What do you think his other two wishes were? You'll need to do this worksheet first: http://www.theschoolrun.com/reading-comprehension-the-magic-lamp
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Writing task: A magical find in the garden

Writing task: A magical find in the garden

Imagine you have found a magical object in the garden. What is it? What happens when you touch it? Now write about what you've found – but don't forget to use adjectives, connectives, exclamation marks and question marks!
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Choosing time connectives worksheet

Choosing time connectives

Time connectives are words or phrases that order your writing into a chronological sequence. Can you fill in the missing time connectives below so the story makes sense?
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Writing a short story about football

Writing a short story

Write about a time when you played or watched a football game. Use the word bank below to help you with spellings.
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Book characters crossword puzzle

Book characters crossword

Classic characters are unforgettable, whether they're falling down unusual rabbit holes, prowling through the jungle or breaking their slates over unfortunate classmates' heads. How many famous characters from children's literature can you identify in this crossword puzzle?
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Revising and improving sentences

Revising and improving sentences

Write some sentences about what you did at the weekend. Now write some interesting words you know from stories you’ve read. Go back to your sentences. Can you add some of the interesting
words into your news writing?
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Planning a story with a spider diagram

Planning a story with a spider diagram

First have a look at the story of Cinderella, presented as a spider diagram. Now think of a story you might like to write. Write the title of the story in the middle of this spider diagram. Then plan the story by outlining the characters, the settings and the events in your spider diagram.
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Continuing stories worksheet

Continuing stories

Read the beginning of this story. What do you think happens next? Write and draw it!
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Planning and writing a story set in an imaginary world worksheet

Planning and writing a story set in an imaginary world

Green or barren, deserted or populated by amazing creatures – it's time to enter an imaginary world! Your child will need to write a story set in an environment of their choosing, using the planning frame to help them organise their ideas before they put pen to paper.
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Conversations in writing worksheet

Conversations in writing

Continue a conversation between two characters, remembering the rules of writing speech: Start each character’s speech on a new line, use “ to open the speech, end the speech with !, ? or , and use ” to close the speech. Don't forget to use a reporting clause (for example: shouted the mouse, replied Frank), too!
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Practise writing speech

Practise writing speech

‘The goblin’s curse’ story does not include any speech between the king and queen. Think back to the moment when the king has sent Orion off to find the goblin. Imagine that the king has gone to tell the queen what is going to happen. How would their conversation unfold?
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Plan your own quest adventure

Plan your own quest adventure

Make some notes to plan your own quest adventure before you write it. Who are the characters? What is the problem? What needs to be found to solve the problem? Who decides to go on the quest? Now write up your quest adventure, but don’t forget: description of characters and setting; paragraphs to show different sections of story; correctly punctuated speech between characters; powerful verbs and adverbs to describe any action.
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Plan and write your own flashback story

Plan and write your own flashback story

Can you plan and write a story with a flashback in it? It may be a good idea to think of the flashback part first. See if you can include: sentences with connectives; speech with correct punctuation; mention of the character’s feelings; texts split into paragraphs.
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Boosting verbs with a thesaurus

Boosting verbs with a thesaurus

Look at this extract from ‘The goblin’s curse’. Some of the verbs have been highlighted. Could you replace them with two or three different, powerful verbs? Use a THESAURUS, a reference book of words and their synonyms, to help you. You could also consult an online thesaurus!
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Analysing flashbacks in stories and films

Analysing flashbacks in stories and films

Can you think of stories or films you have read or seen that contain flashbacks? Do you remember an episode of a programme on TV with a flashback? Think about one of these stories and write notes on this sheet to show how the story was structured.
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