Parts of Speech
Space Race Training
Literature Terms
Folk Tales
The Writing Process
100

Concrete is touchable, but abstract is not, this part of speech names a person, place, thing, or idea.

What is a noun?

100

"That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind," are the immortal words of this pioneering astronaut as he set the first human foot on the Moon.

Who is Neil Armstrong?

100

Not a point on a graph, this is how an author organizes a story.

What is the plot?

100

I hope you learned your lessons! Usually at the end of the story, this helps children understand the point of a fable.

What is the moral?

100

This pre-writing tool helps you to keep your thoughts in the right place.

What is the graphic organizer?

200

Lights, camera, action! This part of speech tells us what someone or something is doing.

What is a verb?

200

A hero to four-legged friends everywhere, this was one of the first living animals to be sent into space.

Who is Laika the Soviet Space Dog?

Who is Ham the Chimpanzee?

200

Don't call it a where or when phrase! This term describes the time and place a story takes place in.

What is the setting?

200

Gods and goddesses often teach real-world, though often exaggerated, heroes in these stories that explain how or why something happens.

What are myths and legends?

200

The first step of the Writing Process, you have to do this to understand what you're going to be writing about.

What is read the prompt?

300

Easy 4, Hard 3, and 6 Senses are all categories of this describing word.

What is an adjective?

300

Not a Cincinnati baseball team, "the Reds" described the adversaries to the United States during the Space Race.

Who are the Soviets?

Who are the Russians?

300

This is how an author shows what a person in the story is like.

What is characterization?

300

Bibbidi-bobbodi-boo! These stories often involve good versus evil, fantastical magic, and a problem to solve.

What are fairy tales?

300

Bring your thunder! This step in the writing process is an important one to get all your ideas onto the page.

What is brainstorm?

400

Found in newspapers and scientific journals, these small adjectives show up before nouns, and tell us how many or if it's a specific noun.

What is an article?

400

Named for the Greek god of light and music, this space program landed 12 men on the Moon between 1969 and 1972.

What is Apollo?

400

No fighting! This term describes the struggles or problems the characters face in a story.

What is conflict?

400

Paul Bunyan, Davey Crockett, John Henry, these larger than life figures are examples of characters in what type of folk tale?

What is a tall tale?

400

After penning your rough draft, this crucial step helps you catch your errors.

What is proofreading?

What is revision?

500

In literature we call it setting, but in writing, this word tells us where or when the events are happening.

What is a preposition?

500

Not in an aquarium or a pool, this specialized tank allows astronauts in training to experience microgravity.

What is the Neutral Buoyancy Lab?

500

You might catch it if it's recurring, this term tells us what the big idea of a story is.

What is the theme?

500

This is a sixteen-letter word that means animals or inanimate objects talk and act like people do.

What is anthropomorphism?

500

You might feel dizzy after this step of the writing process where you use the prompt to create your topic sentence.

What is Turn The Question Around (TTQA)?

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