Fifth Grade Ela Genre Writing Worksheets
BackBelow is list of all worksheets available under this concept. Worksheets are organized based on the concept with in the subject.
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- How to Cite Strong Evidence: Literary Response
These example literary responses model how to cite and explain evidence to support a claim.
- Collecting Strong Evidence
This graphic organizer will help your young writers organize and explain their supporting evidence.
- Creative Writing: Snow Storm
Snow can be beautiful or scary! Your little author can decide what he'll do on his day off in the midst of a snow storm with this writing prompt.
- Money Writing Prompt
What if you had $1,000, but you couldn't spend it on yourself? Flex your creativity and goodwill thinking with this writing prompt.
- Colonial America Writing Prompt
Imagine being around in colonial America. If you were reporting about the American Revolution what would you have said about the times?
- Argument Writing: Parts of an Argument #2
Young writers will practice identifying the five parts of an effective argument before writing their own argument.
- How to Write a Haiku
Learn all about how to write a haiku with this quick and easy worksheet on the structure of this timeless poetry type.
- Reading Response Letter Checklist
After students have learned about reading response letters they can use this checklist to polish their own letter.
- Achieving Goals
This graphic organizer helps kinds understand the importance of achieving goals and how they can do it step by step.
- Cite and Explain Your Evidence #2: Literary Response
This guided practice reinforces how strong writers make claims and support them with strong evidence.
- Storyboard Pre-Write
Use this prewriting activity to help students organize their writing and reinforce transitional language.
- Bad Luck Creative Writing
Did you spill the salt? Step on a crack? Do you even care? You decide what, if anything, causes bad luck. Get the juices flowing for some creative writing.
- Argument Writing: Respond to a Formal Letter
Young writers will write a persuasive letter in response to a formal letter.
- Argument Writing: Pick a Prompt
Use this survey to help students think about their opinions and reasoning for eight high-interest prompts.
- Argument Writing: Topic Cards
Challenge students to come up with arguments and counter-arguments for a controversial topic, whether they agree or not.
- Develop a Story
With this prewriting organizer, students will brainstorm and visualize details of their fictional story.
- Argument Writing: Make a Claim
Introduce your students to argument writing with this high-interest prompt about homework!
- Tell a Tale!
Monster footprints in a dark forest sets the scene for a super scary story! This picture prompt will help your child practice creative writing.
- Creative Writing: Cyclops!
What will happen to this cave-man? Your 5th grader can decide by writing a creative and exciting story to go with this illustration.
- Argument Writing: Who Is Your Audience?
In this brief questionnaire, students will think about who their audience is and what they believe.
- Picture Writing Prompt: Sea Monster
A day of fishing is interrupted by a giant sea monster! What happens next? This writing prompt will help your student stretch his imagination.
- Angel Island Poetry
Try a Chinese poetry style called wu-yan-li-shi, which hopeful immigrants wrote while waiting on Angel Island in California to be admitted to the U.S.
- What's Your Opinion?
Assess kids' ability to support opinions with this writing prompt.
- Everyday Zombie
Zombies always have such a bad rep. Imagine a day in the life from the point of view of a zombie kid!