
Grade Level: 3–5
Subject: English Language Arts (Writing)
Time: 45–60 minutes
Lesson Focus: Understanding the five stages of the writing process
Students will:
Identify the five stages of the writing process.
Explain the purpose of each stage.
Understand that good writers improve their work through multiple drafts.
Complete a simple writing activity using the writing process.
Chart paper or interactive whiteboard
Writing Process anchor chart
Student writing notebooks
Graphic organizer for brainstorming
Pencils
Highlighters or colored pencils
Sticky notes (optional)
Prewriting
Drafting
Revising
Editing
Publishing
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.3.4
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.4.4
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.5.4
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.3.5
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.4.5
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.5.5
Begin by asking:
"Have you ever built something with LEGO® bricks?"
"Did it come together perfectly the first time?"
Explain that writing works the same way.
Tell students:
"Great writers don't create perfect stories on the first try. They improve their writing one step at a time."
Display the Writing Process chart.
Introduce the five steps:
Prewrite
Draft
Revise
Edit
Publish
Briefly explain each stage without going into too much detail.
Choose a simple writing topic.
Example:
My Favorite Season
Think aloud as you model each step.
"I'll brainstorm ideas about my favorite season."
Write a few words:
snow
hot chocolate
sledding
family
Write a short paragraph.
Explain:
"I'm not worrying about spelling every word yet. Right now, I'm getting my ideas on paper."
Reread aloud.
Add a sentence with more details.
Replace a weak word with a stronger one.
Correct capitalization and punctuation.
Fix one spelling mistake.
Rewrite the final version neatly.
Explain that published writing is simply your best finished work.
Choose an easy prompt.
Examples:
My favorite animal
My favorite food
A fun weekend activity
Students complete only the Prewriting stage using a graphic organizer.
After several minutes, have students begin a short draft.
Circulate and encourage students.
Remind them:
"Today we're learning the process—not trying to write a perfect paper."
Students continue writing independently.
Encourage them to:
Finish one short paragraph.
Read it aloud quietly.
Circle one place where they could add more details.
No editing is required today.
The focus is understanding the stages.
Review each stage.
Ask:
Which step helps you organize your ideas?
Which step comes after drafting?
Why do writers revise?
Why shouldn't we worry about making every sentence perfect during drafting?
Create a class anchor chart listing each stage and its purpose.
Students complete the following:
Name the five steps of the writing process.
Which step do you think is most important?
Why do writers revise their work?
Provide picture cues for each stage.
Use sentence starters.
Allow students to brainstorm verbally with a partner.
Offer a partially completed graphic organizer.
Challenge advanced students to:
Add another paragraph.
Identify two revisions they would make.
Explain why revising improves writing.
Students can:
Identify the five stages.
Explain the purpose of each stage.
Complete a simple prewriting organizer.
Write a short first draft.
Demonstrate an understanding that writing improves through revision.
Ask students:
"What surprised you about the writing process?"
Finish with this message:
"Good writers aren't born—they grow by practicing each step of the writing process. Every great story begins with a simple idea and gets better with each revision."
| Step | What Writers Do |
|---|---|
| Prewrite | Brainstorm and organize ideas. |
| Draft | Write your ideas without worrying about perfection. |
| Revise | Improve ideas by adding, removing, or changing information. |
| Edit | Correct spelling, grammar, capitalization, and punctuation. |
| Publish | Share your best finished writing with others. |
Resist the urge to teach every stage in depth during this first lesson. The goal is to help students understand that writing is a process, not a one-step task. In future lessons, dedicate time to exploring each stage individually so students build confidence and mastery one step at a time.
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Posted 7/6/26
Education World®