MainContent
p-top: 48 p-bot: 48 p-left: 32 p-right: 32 p-x: 32 m-bot: 24

This second hard worksheet asks kindergartners to think like authors with four multiple-choice questions about predicting next lines, understanding the purpose of a story starter, and knowing which element comes first in a narrative. Five fill-in-the-blank sentences introduce more advanced vocabulary, including the words 'narrative,' 'transition,' and 'point of view,' while reinforcing that strong story openings always introduce both a character and a setting before the action begins.

Style:
Busy Bee
Narrative Writing: Story Starters
Kindergarten
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Read each question and circle the correct answer.
1. Which sentence would make the BEST next line after 'One day, a rabbit found a golden key'?
 A) Rabbits are soft.
 B) She wondered what door it could open.
 C) Keys are made of metal.
 D) The end.
2. What is the PURPOSE of a story starter?
 A) To end the story
 B) To state the moral
 C) To hook the reader and set up the story
 D) To list the characters
3. Which element comes FIRST in a narrative story?
 A) The solution
 B) The problem
 C) The ending
 D) The introduction
4. Which story starter creates the most CURIOSITY?
 A) A boy went to school.
 B) The weather was cloudy.
 C) On the day I turned six, I woke up with wings.
 D) The end was happy.
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word on the line.
1) A narrative writing piece tells a story from the writer's point of view.
2) Words like 'suddenly,' 'then,' and 'finally' are called transition words.
3) A good story starter introduces the character and setting.
4) After introducing the character, a story should show the problem the character faces.
5) The part of the story where the problem is fixed is called the solution.
🎯

Ready to Practice?

Read each question carefully. For Part A, circle the correct answer. For Part B, write the missing word on the line.

9 Questions
20-25 minutes
Auto-graded
Retry anytime
🏆
Questions Correct
0
Correct
0
Incorrect
0
Skipped
0:00
Time
0%
Score
Great work!

Review Your Answers

See what you got right, missed, or skipped.