LESSON EXTENSIONS
Here are some additional ideas for using this activity with your class.
In younger grades, work on the story collaboratively as a class. Ask students to supply such details as:
How does the main character look and act?
What happens in the beginning, middle, and end of this story?
What words or phrases describe where the story takes place?
Generate a new story starter each day, make copies, and distribute or ask students to record the starter in their notebooks. Have students free write for 10 minutes using the prompt as a starting point. Students may volunteer to share their writing with the class.
Print several story starter templates. Break students up into small groups and distribute one starter to each student. Each student writes the first two lines of their story. Encourage students to write in an open-ended way that invites the addition of new plot points and story details. After writing two sentences, each student passes their sheet to the student on the left. Then, students add two sentences to their new story, and so on. Once small groups have completed several short stories, ask each group to share their favorite one by reading it aloud to the class.
For more advanced writers, have each student create a Story Starters anthology. Ask students to generate and print several (3–5) story starter prompt pages. Then, challenge them to consider their starters as chapters in a book that need to be strung together to make up a larger plot. Students may arrange their starters in any order and should feel free to introduce new characters and details to establish a world where their story starters coexist.
Once students have explored the Story Starter machine and have completed their own stories online, create your own class set of story starters. First, dissect and discuss the structure of the Scholastic Story Starters:
Action directive (Describe a favorite meal for..., Write a funny story about...)
Adjective (a stubborn, a rubbery)
Noun (moose, baseball player)
Dependent clause (who opens a smoothie stand, who lives in a museum)
Then, distribute strips of paper and have students write their own story starter elements and deposit them into one of four bags, hats, or bowls. Ask volunteers to pull one paper slip from each vessel and read the starter out loud. Discuss what elements of the prompts do and do not work and what might be modified to make the story starters even better.
Encourage students to use Story Starters on their iPads. When students have finished writing a story on the iPad, they can save it to the iBooks application as a PDF by tapping on the "Open in" menu option. The saved story on the iPad is a convenient way for students to share their work with family and friends. Teachers can also save the Story Starters Teaching Guide to their iPads using the same procedure.