Lesson

Sequence and Retelling

Students learn to put story events in order and retell the most important parts.

Sequence and Retelling

What students learn

Students learn to retell a story in the right order and include only the most important parts. Begin with Retell: Keep Only the Important Parts so they hear that retelling is more than repeating every sentence.

Why it matters

Retelling shows that a student understood what happened in the story. It also helps them remember the characters, setting, and major events. Sequence: Put the Events in Order helps students keep the story straight from beginning to end.

Learn the idea

A strong retell usually names the characters, tells where the story happened, and shares the big events in order. Retell: Include Characters, Setting, and Events and Retell: Say the Story from Start to Finish show how to say the story clearly without getting stuck on tiny details.

Try it

Ask the child to retell a favorite story in three parts: beginning, middle, and end. If they jump around, stop and point back to the order of the events. Then have them try again with one short sentence for each part.

Parent guide

Use familiar stories with clear beginnings and endings. Let the child retell with drawings, finger puppets, or quick oral sharing. If they leave out the main events, ask, "What happened first?" and "What happened after that?" to bring the order back into focus.