Fifth Grade Ela Writing Process Worksheets

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Below is list of all worksheets available under this concept. Worksheets are organized based on the concept with in the subject.

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  • Argument Writing: Who Is Your Audience?

    In this brief questionnaire, students will think about who their audience is and what they believe.

  • Alliteration for Kids

    Alliterations are awesome! Teach your young writer about this poetic device with this printable breakdown of alliteration.

  • Techy Etiquette

    Challenge your kids to translate LOL into an academic sentence! Give your students extra practice rewriting online comments so that they fit the academic setting.

  • Partner Proofreading

    Partners will work together to complete this worksheet as they participate in peer editing.

  • Practice Using Transitions #2

    Upper grade students will practice using transition words to craft clear and cohesive writing.

  • Publishing Checklist and Reflection

    This checklist creates a healthy habit of evaluating any typed writing. Students will check for font, spacing, indentation, illustrations, grammar, and areas of improvement.

  • Vampire Character Writing: Supporting Details

    Here's great exercise for writers of any age - building a character with supporting details! In this case, a vampire character.

  • Branch Out

    Help your students' confidence in writing persuasive essays grow with this tree graphic organizer. Using this worksheet, students will make connections between opinion, reasons, and examples in their persuasive writing.

  • Mikki and the Jacket

    By writing his own story in this worksheet, your child can learn to "fill in the blanks" of reading comprehension.

  • Crafting an Awesome Title

    In this activity, students will consider different strategies for coming up with titles, and practice crafting them for various pieces of text.

  • Looking at Voice in Bud, Not Buddy

    Voice is the energy, intention, and tone of a piece. Students will practice identifying voice in writing, then examine an excerpt from an award-winning text that book with a strong example of voice.

  • Peer Publishing

    Encourage students to share their writing with classmates and receive feedback to improve their writing with this peer publishing worksheet.

  • Strategies for Crafting Your Title

    A great title hooks the audience and gives readers an idea about what they’ll be reading. With this worksheet, your writers will learn different strategies for crafting titles for any piece of writing.

  • Opinion Essay: Idea Map

    Students will craft their own essay using this graphic organizer as a helpful way to get started.

  • Write Your Own Comic!

    It's an alien invasion! How will the story end? Young writers and use their imaginations to write their own comic strip.

  • Crafting Voice

    Students will learn that voice is the energy, intention, and tone of the piece and then practice infusing different voices into their writing.

  • Character and Setting Pre-Write

    This prewriting activity helps students focus on developing a character and scene for a story.

  • Paragraph Editing

    In this paragraph editing page, kids will have a great time editing this love letter from a Victorian gentleman.

  • Make Your Own Comic

    Show your fifth-grader it's possible to make your own comic rather than just read them. He'll work on creative writing while he's at it!

  • Finish the Comic!

    The incredible Kid Wizard and Ninjastar are about to face off with their arch-nemesis! But how will things end?

  • You Tell the Story

    Peter Pan says what? Your child adds to the famous story with his imagination in this fun writing exercise.

  • Rainbow Editing

    Students will use this fun and colorful revision technique to edit a piece of sample writing.

  • Looking at Voice in Junie B. Jones

    Voice is the energy, intention, and tone of a piece. Students will practice identifying voice in writing, then examine an excerpt from an award-winning text that book with a strong example of voice.

  • What's the Painting?

    You decide what's happening on the page by drawing and writing it in!