Common Core Standards
Grade 6
Writing W.6.3
Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.
Yay, story time! That's what this Common Core Standard is about. According to the people who made these standards, here's what a good story will look like:
1. It'll have a setting and some sort of main character, with a plot that more or less makes sense (unless if deus ex machina is your thing, then by all means go for nonsensicalness).
2. It'll have some words in there that actually tell something about the characters or the plot.
3. It'll have some other words that show how one thing happens after another or how one thing happens in this one place and that other thing happens in that other place.
4. It'll describe things using more specific words than "good" or "bad" or "thing." In other words, it won't do what we've been doing the entire time for this standard. (As they say, the only thing worse than being vague is doing the other thing.)
5. It'll make the reader feel like they didn't just waste a small percentage of his or her life reading this story.
And that's it. Time to have students get writing on that next sixth-grade masterpiece.
Standard Components
- CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.6.3.A
- CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.6.3.B
- CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.6.3.C
- CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.6.3.D
- CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.6.3.E
Example 1
Here's a lesson from a unit about dealing with differences—and of course, you can adjust to any topic of your choosing.
Have students write a narrative essay about a time they formed a unique friendship. They should include first person voice, dialogue, and sensory details. Ask them to pay special attention to the organization of a narrative (beginning, middle, and ending) and the use of character in order to ensure that quality work of appropriate rigor is being practiced.
Aligned Resources
- Teaching Island of the Blue Dolphins: Jump Ship? Or not?
- Teaching Maniac Magee: Pizza Problems—Too Many to Count
- Teaching Esperanza Rising: Everything Esperanza: A Dramatic Presentation
- Teaching Farewell to Manzanar: Every Picture Tells a Story
- Teaching The Westing Game: A Puzzle Mystery: "America the Beautiful": In Depth
- Teaching When You Reach Me: The Write Stuff
- Teaching Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: Integration In Our Nation
- Teaching The Graveyard Book: The Graveyard Book: The Lost Chapter
- Teaching Because of Winn-Dixie: Channeling Winn-Dixie
- Teaching Stargirl: Please Pass the POV
- Teaching The Westing Game: A Puzzle Mystery: Wanted: Dead or Wax Look-Alike!
- The Basics of Social Media: Communicating with One to One Million People: Blogs and Instant Messaging
- Teaching The Graveyard Book: It Takes a Graveyard
- Teaching Freak the Mighty: Memories Real and Imagined
- Teaching From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler: Will the Real Claudia Please Stand Up?
- Teaching A Wrinkle in Time: Right Brain Versus Left Brain
- Teaching Number the Stars: Good to See You Again…
- Internet Safety and Ethics: The Golden Rule Goes Online: Preventing and Stopping Cyberbullying
- Internet Safety and Ethics: Oh No, You Didn't!: Internet Dangers and Strategies for Staying Safe
- Teaching Monster: The Last Scene
- Teaching Murder on the Orient Express: The Mysterious Story
- Teaching Out of the Dust: Writing Your Own Story
- Teaching Julie of the Wolves: A Better Ending?
- Teaching Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry: T.J.'s Downward Spiral
- Teaching The Westing Game: A Puzzle Mystery: Share the Wealth: Pair with an Heir
- Using Copyrighted, Creative Commons, and Public Domain Materials: Mixing It Up: Using and Modifying Creative Materials
- Teaching Coraline: Seeing Double
- Teaching A Little Princess: What the Furniture Tells You
- ELA Online: Digital Literacy Connections to English Language Arts: Facebook or Twitter Plot Summary
- Teaching Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH: Rats on the Run
- Teaching Hatchet: What's The Big Deal in Hatchet?: Determining the Climax
- Teaching The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe: Out of This World
- Teaching The View from Saturday: Too Many Narrators? What's Your Point of View?
- Teaching The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963: The Byron Files
- Teaching Black Beauty: Writing a Didactic Story