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Biographies
This page contains the Super Teacher Worksheets collection of biographies. These nonfiction articles include reading comprehension activities for elementary-aged students.
Logged in members can use the Super Teacher Worksheets filing cabinet to save their favorite worksheets.
Quickly access your most used files AND your custom generated worksheets!
Please login to your account or become a member and join our community today to utilize this helpful feature.
Here is the link to our complete collection of reading comprehension stories, articles, and poems for kids.
Color in black-and-white illustrations of some of history's notable people. View our coloring pages here.
Sample Worksheet Images
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The BEST Elementary Biography Project
Looking for a fun, new research and writing project for your elementary kiddos? This living wax museum is a great way to tie together reading, writing, social studies and speaking and listening skills all in one fun project. I have done this project with second through fourth graders and they have all loved it.
Start this project off by having your students select what famous figure they want to research, or by assigning them a famous figure. My ABSOLUTE favorite books for us to conduct our research are the “Who Was” Series by Jim Gigliotti. They are perfect for on-level/higher second graders, and are most appropriate for third and fourth grade students.
Typically, I will introduce the project, show the students my example, and then briefly introduce all of the famous figures that they can pick from. I then let them go one by one and pick which person they want to research.
For my second graders, I always have one group (my lower level readers) that work together to collect our research all on the same person, but then I release them to each write their own reports.
We spend about one week reading our books and researching our influential figure. While they work, they take notes on important aspects of that person’s life. There are also a ton of great books on Epic ! that students can use for additional research and ideas.
After our notes are compiled, students begin writing their drafts for their research reports. I have students write 6 total paragraphs about their famous figures. We do an introduction, a paragraph about their early life, a paragraph about why they are famous, fun facts, a paragraph about a character trait that best describes them and why, and then a closing.
We spend about 1-1 & 1/2 weeks working on our writing. We write about a paragraph or 2 per day, then take our writing through the revising/editing/publishing process. I then give students a good 2-3 days to spend a TON of time publishing their work to the best of their capability, using their best handwriting and best pictures that they can.
Wax Museum: Speaking & Listening
We end this project by inviting parents and other classes to come watch us present our reports. This is a fun time where the students get to dress up like their famous person, bring in props and practice speaking in front of an audience. We always get amazing feedback from the parents and from other classroom teachers. This component is totally optional, but completely worth it!
I always send home a student letter at the beginning of the project so that parents have ample time to help students gather materials for their costumes and to help them get a good understanding of who their influential figure is.
Distance Learning / Digital Learning :
Is your school closed for an extended period of time due to this crazy virus? This project is a GREAT way for students to continue learning at home. Simply send the PDF to parents to print at home (or print at school if you still have access), and send students to Epic or your local online library to find biographies on the person of their choice. Then, add a digital component by having students upload their videos to Google Classroom, SeeSaw or the digital platform of your choice. This is a great way to provide a few weeks of reading/writing plans to parents, while incorporating choice in student learning still.
Recommended Resources :
Snag everything you need for the biography research and writing reports in this Biography Writing Resource .
Click here for a compilation of all of my favorite “Who Was” characters to research for this project. These books are the perfect level for 2nd-4th graders, and are really affordable (between $2-4 each by following my Amazon affiliate link.)
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Biography Graphic Organizers
Use this collection of biography graphic organizers to help your fourth and fifth grade students explore biographies during reading workshop.
These biography graphic organizers will be a helpful tool for you as you are planning your biography unit of study.
This is another free resource for teachers and homeschool families from The Curriculum Corner.
Planning for a study of biographies
As you plan for your unit of study, your first action should be gathering high interest biographies for your students to explore.
These mentor texts should be good, clear examples of biographies. Include your favorites and be sure to include books that will interest your students as well. It’s also a good idea to gather a stack of informational text books that fall under that category of narrative nonfiction. Throughout the unit, you might want to refer to these as nonexamples of biographies.
There are many informational text picture books that are written at a fourth to sixth grade level. This means that you should be able to find some shorter texts that will still challenge your readers. This can be helpful when you want students to explore multiple biographies.
As you work to gather your books, ask students who they would be most interested in learning about. Try to find books that match their requests to keep them engaged in the unit.
If you have a student interested in a subject but are unable to find a book to share, you can turn this into a follow up project. Have the student write their own biography about the subject. You can add this to your classroom librarym .
About these biography graphic organizers
This collection contains a variety of biography graphic organizers. You can choose to use the ones that fit your students best.
As always, I encourage you to model these organizers as you introduce them. This will help students to fully understand the expectations.
Lesson 1 Expository or Narrative Nonfiction?
Begin by helping students understand that there is a different between expository nonfiction and narrative nonfiction. Biographies fall under the category of narrative nonfiction and tell a story. Narrative nonfiction may also tell about an event. Expository nonfiction provides an explanation or directions.
This first lesson is designed to help students develop an understanding of the difference between a biography (which is narrative nonfiction) and expository nonfiction.
Share the stack of mentor texts along with the nonexamples of biographies (which should be expository nonfiction.)
Allow students time to look through these books and “notice” differences. Encourage them to make notes on post-its and mark the spots in the text.
These differences will help students begin to develop an understanding of the differences. When students have completed their noticings, pull them together as a class and give them time to share what they found.
Create an anchor chart for students to refer to that is titled “Noticings” and contains the student observations. Observations for biographies might include: tells a story, tells about a person’s life, includes dates, has bold words, has a table of contents, includes a glossary, has an index.
Observations for expository nonfiction might include: gives directions, tells all about an object or animal, explains something, includes dates, has bold words, has a table of contents, includes a glossary, has an index.
Noticings Exit Ticket To check student understanding, have students complete this exit ticket. Students find a biography and an example of expository nonfiction. They then include their choices and reasoning on their exit ticket.
Lesson 2 Biography Story Map
A biography can be similar to a fiction book which tells a story.
It includes a main character, setting, time and often problems.
Have students choose a biography to read and complete this story map.
You might choose to model this lesson by reading aloud a biography one day and completing the story map together.
The next day, students will use their silent reading time to read a different biography they are interested in and then complete the story map.
Lesson 3 Character Traits
Just like when reading fiction, students reading biographies should be trying to determine the character traits of the subject of the biography.
It is important for students to understand that character traits are different from what the person looks like. These resources can be used to help students develop an understanding of the difference: Character Traits .
We suggest using a biography that can be shared during class in order to model the differences for students. Once students have developed an understanding, they can complete their own graphic organizer after reading a just right book during silent reading time.
Lesson 4 Influences
Every person has others who influence his or her life.
These people have positive and negative effects on the character in a book.
For this lesson, focus on how other people in the biography have had an impact on the person.
Students will identify what influence the person had and if the influence was positive, negative or both.
It will be necessary for you to model this with the class in order for students to understand the expectations.
Once a model has been completed with the class, you can have students complete their own graphic organizer during independent reading time.
Lesson 5 Taking Notes While Reading
When reading a biography, it is sometimes important for the reader to take notes so that they remember the important facts.
This organizer can be used for a tool that helps students record the facts in the book.
Lesson 6 Reflections
An important part of reading is thinking about what is being read.
Use these cards to encourage students to think about the person they are reading about.
You can print the page on cardstock and then laminate for durability.
Or, you can print on regular paper and have students choose a question. They can record their response on the back like an exit ticket.
Lesson 7 Asking and Answering Questions
Readers ask and answer questions in their heads as they read to help them create meaning.
This graphic organizer gives students practice with this skill while asking them to record their thoughts.
You may choose to have students answer their own questions or to trade with a peer who is reading the same book.
Lesson 8 Cause & Effect
This is a concept which will take a great deal of modeling.
Students must understand that events in a person’s life lead to outcomes.
As you read a biography, work with the class to find important events in a person’s life and the impact those events had on the person.
As part of this work, help students identify where the answers are.
When students practice this skill independently, you might choose to have them use a post-it note to mark the evidence found in the text.
Lesson 9 Life Lessons
Sometimes reading a biography might teach us lessons we can apply to our own lives.
Encourage students to look at the book they are reading and determine what they can learn from their character.
These lessons might be positive or negative.
You can download this set of biography graphic organizers here:
Reading Download
CCSS Standards Addressed:
Preparing Your Reading Workshop - The Curriculum Corner 123
Thursday 20th of June 2019
[…] Biographies Collection for 4th and 5th Grades […]
Biography Unit of Study for Reading - The Curriculum Corner 123
Monday 27th of May 2019
[…] you need additional resources for enrichment or differentiation you might want to check out the Biographies – Resources from our 456 […]
Monday 14th of April 2014
This is a fabulous post! I hope you don't mind, I'm going to link to this page on Wednesday when I share about biographies on my blog, too! :) :)
3 Creative Ideas for Teaching Biographies Your Students Will Love
There is so much power in teaching our students about history using biographies. We can all learn from the success and failures of others. But biographies often get a bad rap of being dry and boring. It doesn’t have to be that way. In fact, through this genre, our students can practice many different reading skills and strategies. That’s why I use graphic organizers that will allow my students to recall information from the biographies in creative ways. I am excited to share these 3 creative ideas for teaching biographies using fun and exciting graphic organizers I know your students will love!
Teaching Biographies can be Exciting
When teaching biographies in my classroom I like to immerse my students into the lives of the person they are learning about. From decorating the classroom to dressing up like the person we are studying, the possibilities are endless. This really helps to “bring the person to life” and make the learning more engaging and realistic for our students.
No matter what biography you are focusing on, these 3 creative ideas for teaching biographies are going to be so fun your kids will be begging for more!
1. EXTRA! EXTRA!
Read all about it in this year’s edition of the 3rd grade Daily Times. And that’s the hook! One of my favorite ways to immerse my students into learning is to turn them all into little reporters. At the end of our biography unit, we create a newspaper. It includes articles about each of the people of influence we focused on. I can’t tell you how excited my students get when they hear they will be writing and “publishing” a newspaper!
I like to put students in groups of 3 or 4. Then, give each one a person they will be focusing on. As a group, they must choose graphic organizers to will help them record information about their person. They can read an article that I provide, get information from a book, or research the person on a safe search site.
After reading the information about their person, they use the graphic organizers they chose to record important information about the person. This is the “interview” for the article.
Pulling it all Together
Next, it’s time to put the information from the graphic organizers all together. They will write all of the information in one article that will be included in our newspaper. The newspaper can be tangible if you want your students to assemble it and include their own drawings. But, it can also be digital with each group focusing on specific slides. This can then be projected on a whiteboard or viewed on a tablet or computer.
Not only is it a great way for students to learn from informative text, but it also gives you a fun and easy way to assess their learning. Sharing the newspaper in the school library is sure to be a hit. Teachers or librarians can read the newspaper articles to classes when they visit the library. So cool!
This really is such a great way for me to teach biographies in an easy way my students love!
2. The Life and Times…
This is a fun timeline activity that begs to be interactive! When teaching biographies, I love to use timelines because it gives students a concrete visual of when key events took place. This helps students better able to identify with the life of the person they are studying.
For example, if we are focusing on Amelia Earheart, I create a huge timeline that goes around my classroom. We start at the beginning and focus each day on an aspect of her life. We add information to the timeline as we go, and this is where those awesome graphic organizers come into play.
With a cause and effect graphic organizer, I can ask my students to think critically about events in the life of Amelia Earheart. Then we can discuss how those events shaped her future. As we learn about other things that are happening in the world, we can add those to the timeline as well.
I can’t tell you how awesome it is to get those “lightbulb” moments! I love when students make connections between world events and the person they are studying.
The end of our timeline activity concludes with a flipbook with all the information we have learned about Amelia Earheart. My kids really love this activity because they are allowed to get up and walk around. They take their clipboards to make notes from the timeline to help them complete the information for the flipbook. It’s a great way for them to show off their learning when they take it home.
3. Pick a Person
This is a really fun way to build excitement when teaching biographies. I put the names of all the people I want my students to choose from when working on their biographies. Then, after arranging my class into 4 or 5 groups, it’s time for the choosing ceremony. Each team gets to reach inside a basket and draw the name of a person. This will be the person they will be responsible for reporting on at the end of the unit.
Next, each group has to do some research on the person of influence they will be focusing on. This could mean a special trip to the library for the group to check out a book, some safe search research on the computer, or even a look through our biographies section of our class book boxes. I think this is a great way to give your students a little independence and responsibility they will be overjoyed to get.
Graphic organizers are so great for biographies because there is so much information available out there. It can feel overwhelming for kids to try to organize their thoughts and recall important facts and details about the lives of the people we are studying. They are a great way to get our students to really focus on what’s important and what they want to include in their presentations.
The Presentations
Now, it’s time for the really fun part! I give my students some time to think about how they could present their information to the class. Some groups like to use technology and create a video slideshow, a recorded skit, or even a self-made news clip featuring their famous person. Other groups may want to get creative and make a poster with visual images representing the information they learned about the person they are focusing on.
If a free choice scenario isn’t your cup of tea, consider making a list of presentation options you would be comfortable with. By giving students some choice in their final presentation you really get to see them tap into strengths and creativity. No matter how you choose to have your students present the information, chances are they will have a blast doing it!
Grab Your Free Biography Graphic Organizers
I have put together my favorite graphic organizers to use when teaching biographies and you can grab them for free! Just join the Keep ’em Thinking community to get access to the Free Resource Library. You can find these biography graphic organizers and lots more!
Just sign-up below and grab your free graphic organizers today!
Teaching Biographies is a Breeze
Teaching biographies really is a breeze! With customizable graphic organizers to help your students, they will not only focus on the information they are learning but recall it.
And . . . if you need some ready-to-use biographies check out the Keep ’em Thinking store . You can find a variety of biography resources that are perfect to use with the graphic organizers.
Be sure to save these creative ways for teaching biographies ideas to your favorite Pinterest teacher board so you can come back any time for even more fun and exciting biography activities!
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Teaching Biographies: Activities and Ideas
Teaching with biographies and ben franklin.
Biographies: Creating Timelines of a Life
- Resources & Preparation
- Instructional Plan
- Related Resources
Studying the lives of others and reading biographies is of interest and value to young learners. In this lesson, students explore multiple sources to create a timeline about the life of a person of their choosing. The experience requires students to work together and to research and resolve potentially conflicting pieces of information about the life they research. Extension activities include developing essays from the original research.
Featured Resources
Interactive Timeline : Use this online tool to help students record events in a selected person's life.
From Theory to Practice
In order to fill the void in her students' knowledge of people with "admirable qualities," Michele Keating introduced them to the genre of biography. She states: "My objective was to expose students to the many people, past and present, who are worthy of admiration and to explore together the dedication, creativity, and achievements of these people." (66) In the end, the biographical study "broadened their view of people worth admiring." (69)
Biographies can expose our students to a whole world of people who can inspire and motivate them. In this lesson students select their own person of interest and consult multiple sources to get to know them.
This lesson was originally developed with Maggie Chase and Bess Berghoff, Indiana University 1990.
Further Reading
Common Core Standards
This resource has been aligned to the Common Core State Standards for states in which they have been adopted. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, CCSS alignments are forthcoming.
State Standards
This lesson has been aligned to standards in the following states. If a state does not appear in the drop-down, standard alignments are not currently available for that state.
NCTE/IRA National Standards for the English Language Arts
- 1. Students read a wide range of print and nonprint texts to build an understanding of texts, of themselves, and of the cultures of the United States and the world; to acquire new information; to respond to the needs and demands of society and the workplace; and for personal fulfillment. Among these texts are fiction and nonfiction, classic and contemporary works.
- 3. Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
- 5. Students employ a wide range of strategies as they write and use different writing process elements appropriately to communicate with different audiences for a variety of purposes.
- 7. Students conduct research on issues and interests by generating ideas and questions, and by posing problems. They gather, evaluate, and synthesize data from a variety of sources (e.g., print and nonprint texts, artifacts, people) to communicate their discoveries in ways that suit their purpose and audience.
Materials and Technology
- Biography text sets, created using the provided Websites
- Information on your personality of choice
- Strips of paper for timeline note taking (half a sheet of legal paper, 4.25"x14"), pens or pencils) optional instead of online Interactive Timeline)
- Internet access
Biography Selection & Rationale
Preparation
- Review the written lesson and suggested links. Gather sufficient materials to introduce the lesson—ideally 3-4 information resources for up to six personalities, to include 1) biographies written at the 2nd-5th grade level, preferably including numerous pictures and charts, 2) video tapes, and 3) Web resources. Potential personalities include famous presidents [Washington, Lincoln, Kennedy], inventors [Franklin, George Washington Carver, Madame C.J. Walker], scientists [Marie Curie, Edwin Hubble, Samuel Lee Kountz, Jr.], space explorers [Neil Armstrong, Sally Ride, John Glenn], or athletes [Jim Thorpe, Ichiro Suzuki, Lance Armstrong]. This initial selection must often be limited to personalities for whom you can locate multiple resources, but should include a range of ages, gender, cultures, occupations, and historical and modern day figures.
- Review use of the Interactive Timeline .
- Conduct a short inquiry of your own on a personality of interest as a means of introducing the lesson. Amelia Earhart is one personality for whom you are likely to find disparate information and various hypotheses regarding her disappearance. See The Last Flight Website for information and additional Web sources.
Student Objectives
Students will
- negotiate with peers to select persons of interest for their study.
- use a variety of information resources to synthesize, create, and communicate what they've learned on a timeline.
- negotiate with peers to select key events.
- research further to resolve conflicting information.
Session One: Introducing the Lesson
- Share your interest in the chosen personality and your quest for more information about that person. Leaf through a magazine article or book, sharing key events, show short clips from a video, and/or share several pieces of information on a Website.
- Highlight instances when the authors of the resources emphasize different aspects of the personality's life or when you run across conflicting dates or information. Share that resolving such conflicts is always a challenge for researchers, and generate with students an initial list of ways they might resolve conflicting source information.
- Introduce the initial set of resources, and invite groups of students to select and support with rationale two personalities worthy of the group's study among the collected resources, as well as two additional personalities (browsing the Resources section is one source for additional names). Students can make their selections on loose sheets of paper, in a bound notebook, or on the included Biography Selection & Rationale .
- Ask students to work in small groups to make the selections and generate the rationale. If there is time, ask a spokesperson to share how different group members made their selections.
- Create a whole group list of preferred choices, dividing into those for whom resources are already gathered and those that will require a search and gathering of sources.
- Ask students to make an initial choice by adding their initials after the listed name of their choice. Indicate a deadline when resources must be collected for newly generated names—over the weekend is a workable timeframe—and join the students' search for those resources. The personality from the initial set of resources can serve as a "default" choice if resources can't be located, yet note that the quality of the research is enhanced by student commitment to a personality of interest so it can be well worth the effort to help students gather resources.
Session Two: Small Group Research
- Students are seated in groups of 3-5 with sufficient resources so that each student has his or her own text on the same personality (book, magazine article, CD-ROM, Website, video).
- Ask students to browse their texts quietly, mapping the key events on their timeline paper strip. Encourage sufficient flexibility for students to invent their own ways of taking notes on the timeline. Advise that including page numbers, URLs and counter information will aid them in revisiting information if necessary.
- All begin working quietly. Circulate to encourage those who are reading page-by-page to browse key subtitles, charts or photograph annotations. The independent work period should be limited to no more than 30-40 minutes.
- As the small groups begin to finish browsing their texts, encourage them to share the gathered information among themselves. What have they found? What information is new? of interest? a surprise?
- Ask the group to agree on 6-10 key events in the life of their personality. If computer access is limited and the online timeline tool must be shared, create a schedule so each group has the opportunity to enter the key events. Note that entering data and printing out the timeline must be accomplished in one sitting.
Session Three: Debriefing the Initial Research
- Conduct a full group discussion of the groups' work: What went well, what was a challenge? Which texts were helpful? Which were less helpful? How did the group decide on key events? How will they further explore conflicting information?
- Revisit the initial list of strategies to resolve conflicting information. Add strategies as necessary. Try the strategies out on one or two key conflicts as applicable.
- Post the class-generated strategies in the school library for on-going reference.
- Schedule additional small group work time to resolve conflicting information.
- Help teams develop short bibliographies of their resource text set, sharing the protocols for citation of the various sources.
- Create individual online timelines on figures of interest related to another course of study, i.e. world leaders, scientists, women explorers.
- Create autobiographical timelines.
- Recreate paper timelines, using colored pencils or fine tip markers to add illustrations.
- Use timelines as "notes" to write a fuller biography essay. One potential online tool that helps students manage their ideas and writing can be found at The Biography Maker Website .
- Begin another round of biography research, challenging students to research alone or in pairs, using the strategies developed in these introductory lessons.
- Categorize the attributes of the famous people you have studied. See the Images of Greatness Website as one example by a 4th/5th grade class.
Student Assessment / Reflections
- Group conversation
- Calendar Activities
- Student Interactives
- Strategy Guides
Students generate descriptive timelines and can include images in the description.
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- Kindergarten K
A great way to teach about history and content-area topics, biographies highlight famous figures, inventors, scientists, civil rights leaders, sports legends, and heros. Many of these mini-books, plays, and passages feature question/response activities, biography worksheets, teaching guides, lesson ideas, and graphic organizers.
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Biography Worksheets for Grades K-5
- Nelson Mandela Biography: A Reading Warm-Up
- Helen Keller Biography: A Reading Warm-Up
- Walt Disney Biography: A Nonfiction Reading Warm-Up
- Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad
- Helen Keller
- Getting to Know Me
- Learn About Susan B. Anthony
- Benjamin Franklin Little Book
- Abraham Lincoln Biography & Mini-Book
- Betsy Ross Little Book
- Babe Ruth Reading Warm-Up: Biography
- Learn About Paul Revere
- We Beat the Street Discussion Guide
- Albert Einstein Biography: A Reading Warm-Up
- Albert Einstein, Physicist
- Betsy Ross Biography: Reading Warm-Up for Grades 1 & 2
- Martin Luther King Jr Coloring Page
- Learn About Johnny Appleseed
- Thomas Alva Edison, Inventor
- My Book About George Washington
- George Washington Biography: A Reading Warm-Up
- Garrett Morgan Coloring Page
- George Washington Carver – Coloring Page
- The Washington Monument
- My Book About Martin Luther King, Jr.
- The Life and Accomplishments of Martin Luther King Jr.
- Daniel Boone Biography: A Reading Warm-Up
- Science and Social Studies: Benjamin Franklin
- Bio of a Famous Scientist
- More Biography Printables, Grades K-5
Featured 5th Grade Resources
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How to Help Your 4th Grader Write a Biography
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Assignments can differ from one teacher to another, but most fourth-grade biography papers will involve a specific format. If you don't have detailed instructions from their teacher, you can follow these instructions to help your child develop a great paper.
Every paper should have the following sections:
- An introductory paragraph
- Three body paragraphs
- A summary paragraph
The cover page gives the reader information about your child, their teacher, and the subject of your child's paper. It also makes the work look more polished. The cover page should include the following information:
- The title of your child's paper
- Your child's name
- The name of your child's teacher and their school
- Today's date
Introductory Paragraph
The introductory paragraph is where your child introduces his topic. It should contain a strong first sentence that gives the reader a clear idea of what the paper is about. If your child is writing a report about Abraham Lincoln, the opening sentence may look something like this:
Abraham Lincoln once described himself as an ordinary man with an extraordinary story.
The introductory sentence should be followed by a few sentences that give a little more information about the topic and lead up to your child's "big claim," or thesis statement . A thesis statement is not merely a statement of fact. Rather, it is a specific claim that will be argued and defended later in the paper. The thesis statement also serves as a roadmap, giving the reader an idea of what is coming next.
Body Paragraphs
The body paragraphs of the biography are where your child goes into detail about their research. Each body paragraph should be about one main idea. In a biography of Abraham Lincoln, your child might write one paragraph about Lincoln's childhood and another about his time as president.
Each body paragraph should contain a topic sentence, support sentences, and a transition sentence.
A topic sentence states the main idea of the paragraph. Support sentences are where your child goes into detail, adding more information that supports the topic sentence. At the end of each body paragraph should be a transition sentence, which links the ideas from one paragraph to another. Transition sentences help guide the reader and keep the writing flowing smoothly.
Sample Body Paragraph
A body paragraph may look something like this:
(Topic sentence) Abraham Lincoln struggled to keep the country together when some people wanted to see it split apart. The Civil War broke out after many American states wanted to start a new country. Abraham Lincoln showed leadership skills when he led the Union to victory and kept the country from splitting in two. (Transition) His role in the Civil War kept the country together, but led to many threats to his own safety. (Next topic sentence) Lincoln did not back down under the many threats he received. . . .
Summary or Conclusion Paragraph
A strong conclusion restates your child's argument and sums up everything they have written. It should also include a few sentences that repeat the points your child made in each body paragraph. In the end, your child should include a final sentence that sums up the whole argument.
Although they contain some of the same information, the introduction and the conclusion should not be the same. The conclusion should build on what your child has written in their body paragraphs and wrap things up for the reader.
Sample Summary Paragraph
The summary (or conclusion) should look something like this:
Although many people in the country did not like Abraham Lincoln at the time, he was a great leader for our country. He kept the United States together when it was in danger of falling apart. He also stood brave in the face of danger and led the way to equal rights for all people. Abraham Lincoln is one of the most outstanding leaders in American history.
Bibliography
Your child's teacher may require a bibliography at the end of the student's paper. The bibliography is simply a list of books or articles that your child used for his research. The sources should be listed in a precise format and in alphabetical order .
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Here is the link to our complete collection of reading comprehension stories, articles, and poems for kids. Color in black-and-white illustrations of some of history's notable people. View our coloring pages here. View the Super Teacher Worksheets collection of biographies for elementary-aged kids. These nonfiction articles include reading ...
Snag everything you need for the biography research and writing reports in this Biography Writing Resource. Click here for a compilation of all of my favorite "Who Was" characters to research for this project. These books are the perfect level for 2nd-4th graders, and are really affordable (between $2-4 each by following my Amazon affiliate ...
2. Biography Activities for Elementary Students. These biography activities are great resources for teaching biographies to elementary students. It provides teachers with no prep printable biography activities that can be used over and over when studying any person. This unit was designed to enhance the study of individuals.
Use this collection of biography graphic organizers to help your fourth and fifth grade students explore biographies during reading workshop. These biography graphic organizers will be a helpful tool for you as you are planning your biography unit of study. This is another free resource for teachers and homeschool families from The Curriculum ...
A biography writing unit about the life and career of Kamala Harris, who became the vice president of the United States in January 2021. The NO PREP unit has been split into four separate lessons and is perfect for students in third grade or fourth grade.
2. The Life and Times…. This is a fun timeline activity that begs to be interactive! When teaching biographies, I love to use timelines because it gives students a concrete visual of when key events took place. This helps students better able to identify with the life of the person they are studying.
With ABC brainstorm, students write what they know about a given topic using each letter of the alphabet. Instead of ABC's, we did a BEN brainstorm. Students wrote one fact about Ben Franklin with each of the 3 letters: "B", "E", and "N". (3 facts are much faster to write than 26.) I discovered that many of my students knew very little of Ben ...
Begin another round of biography research, challenging students to research alone or in pairs, using the strategies developed in these introductory lessons. Categorize the attributes of the famous people you have studied. See the Images of Greatness Website as one example by a 4th/5th grade class.
Download printable lesson plans , reading passages , games and puzzles , clip art , bulletin board ideas, and skills sheets for kids in any grade. Browse Scholastic's collection of printable biography worksheets and mini-books on famous historical figures, inventors, civil rights leaders, and more!
Instant differentiation!". She pulled out a set of lesson plans and began to explain. "As you can see, we'll spend three weeks on our biography genre study. To accomplish everything, we'll layer it in three sections. The first two - reading, responding and research - are essential. The third - enrichment activities - can be used ...
Others are biography series for elementary students. Included are biographies of scientists and historical figures and inspirational stories from people of different ethnicities. SaleBestseller No. 1. The Story of the Wright Brothers: An Inspiring…. $6.29.
BIOGRAPHY UNIT FOCUS GRADE 4 Essential Common Core Standards R.I.4.2 Determine the main idea of a text and explain how it is supported by key details; summarize the text. R.I.4.4 Determine the meaning of general academic and domain-specific words or phrases in a text relevant to a grade 4 topic or subject area.
Created by. Thrifty in Third Grade by Cassie Smith. This fourth grade Biography Writing Unit is just what you need to teach your students how to write a biography! This unit has kid-friendly rubrics, anchor charts, graphic organizers, and even centers! With the included mentor text and lesson plans, you will be able to effortlessly guide your ...
Printables for Grades 6-12. Use these printables to expand your students' learning about well-known people. Activities include warm-ups, reading passages, fun-fact printables, and much more. We Beat the Street Discussion Guide. Albert Einstein Biography: A Reading Warm-Up. Albert Einstein, Physicist. Gandhi. The Peanuts Gang: Charles Schulz.
Biography Writing for 2nd Grade. Biography Writing for 3rd Grade. Biography Writing for 5th Grade. Biography Writing for 6th Grade. Biography Writing for 7th Grade. A collection of resources to use when teaching your students about the biography text type. Resources include planning templates, checklists, writing...
Grade Levels: 3-5, K-3. In this lesson plan which is adaptable for grades 1-5, students will use BrainPOP and/or BrainPOP Jr. resources to learn about biographies. Students will then select a person whose biography they would like to read (or watch a short video about on BrainPOP). Finally, students will write their own biography on a selected ...
Biography Worksheets for Grades K-5. Introduce your students to the lives of famous and notable individuals with our biography printables. These resources, activities, and lesson plans are sure to interest your students in the study of biographies. They can follow the lives of many interesting people, including presidents, suffragists, and ...
The bibliography is simply a list of books or articles that your child used for his research. The sources should be listed in a precise format and in alphabetical order . A biography written by a 4th grader should have the following components: cover page, introductory paragraph, body paragraphs, and conclusion.
Historical biographies written for kids. Learn the life story and biography of influencial people: US Presidents, World Leaders, Inventors, Women, Artists, Civil Rights heroes. ... History Biography Geography Science Games. Search Ducksters: Biographies. Biographies by Date Biographies Alphabetical. Pick the person or subject below to view ...
Fourth Grade Biographies Worksheets for teaching and learning in the classroom or at home. Download all our Fourth Grade Biographies Worksheets for teachers, parents, and kids. Get Unlimited Printing, Downloading, and No Ads!
By reading these biographies, second-grade and third-grade students learn about the famous person through a fun, easy-to-read passage. Students can also use the QR Codes for additional biography research. Included are comprehension activities that support a sequence of events and categorizing facts, as well as a simple biography report.
You will find EIGHT different activities to complete with your students in this resource. These are the perfect activities to do the week of St. Blaise's feast day, which is celebrated on February 3 each year. Complete them in religion class or for bell work each morning. Please note: All of these activities include the Catholic saint, St ...
These are the perfect activities to do the week of St. Patrick's feast day, which is celebrated on March 17 each year. Complete them in religion class or for bell work each morning. *Please note: All of these activities include the Catholic saint, St. Patrick* See what teachers are saying about my other Catholic saint resources: