teaching resource

Winter Writing Prompts for Beginning Writers

  • Updated

    Updated:  26 Sep 2023

Use the season of winter to inspire writing in your early years classroom.

  • Editable

    Editable:  Google Slides

  • Non-Editable

    Non-Editable:  PDF

  • Pages

    Pages:  1 Page

  • Curriculum
  • Years

    Years:  F - 2

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teaching resource

Winter Writing Prompts for Beginning Writers

  • Updated

    Updated:  26 Sep 2023

Use the season of winter to inspire writing in your early years classroom.

  • Editable

    Editable:  Google Slides

  • Non-Editable

    Non-Editable:  PDF

  • Pages

    Pages:  1 Page

  • Curriculum
  • Years

    Years:  F - 2

Use the season of winter to inspire writing in your early years classroom.

Winter Writing Worksheets for Early Years

Thinking of a topic to write about can be a real challenge for our youngest students. Embedding writing tasks in real-life events can help inspire ideas in our littlest writers as they link their writing to their own experiences.

This set of four writing prompts has been based on the familiar experience of the season of winter. Each worksheet in this resource provides a thought-provoking writing stimulus about winter with an accompanying visual word bank for students to draw upon when writing.

Two differentiated versions of the writing prompts are provided. The first set provides a sentence starter to help students get on their way with their writing. The set of sentence starters includes:

  • In the winter, I wear…
  • To build a snowman, you need…
  • To warm up from the cold, I…
  • On a cold day, I like to…

The second set does not provide a sentence starter, allowing more confident writers to start their writing in whatever way they choose.

Tips for Differentiation + Scaffolding

Have students extend their writing into a multi-paragraph piece for students needing acceleration.

Encourage students requiring additional support to verbalise their ideas before writing or draw a picture of what they will write about.

Additionally, you could project the worksheet onto a screen, work through one prompt as a class, and then have your students write a paragraph for a different prompt independently in their workbooks.

Easily Download and Print

Use the dropdown icon on the Download button to choose between the PDF or Google Slides resource file.


This resource was created by Anna Helwig, a Teach Starter collaborator.

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