Creative Writing helps students express ideas, emotions, and imagination through stories, poems, and plays. With inquiry learning, students are encouraged to ask questions, experiment with different writing styles, and reflect on their own voice as authors. Instead of simply following strict formats, learners explore creativity through role-play, peer feedback, and real-life topics. This process builds confidence, sharpens critical thinking, and makes writing fun and personal. By turning writing into discovery, Creative Writing becomes more than an assignment—it becomes a way for students to share their unique perspective with the world.
🟢 Starter
- Write a short story that begins with “One day at school…”
- Create a poem about your favorite season.
- Write three sentences describing a magical creature.
- Imagine you wake up in a different country—describe your first day.
- Write a letter to your future self.
- Create a diary entry from the perspective of a dog or cat.
- Write five sentences about a dream you had.
- Make up a funny conversation between two objects in your room.
- Write a story that takes place in only one hour.
- Describe your favorite food using all five senses.
- Write a superhero character with one unusual power.
- Create a story where the main character finds a hidden key.
- Write three riddles for your classmates to solve.
- Imagine a day without electricity—describe what happens.
- Write a story in which the main character never speaks.
- Create a poem using only color words.
- Write about a secret passage you discovered in your school.
- Imagine the world in the year 3025 and describe it.
- Write a story where the ending is a big surprise.
- Describe your perfect weekend in three paragraphs.
🟡 Practice
- Write a short play with three characters.
- Create a fable that teaches a lesson.
- Rewrite a fairy tale from the villain’s perspective.
- Write a descriptive paragraph about a storm.
- Create a story where two characters swap lives for a day.
- Write a poem about friendship.
- Imagine you can talk to plants—what do they say?
- Write a mystery that takes place in your neighborhood.
- Create a newspaper article about a made-up event.
- Write a story that takes place inside a video game.
- Describe your classroom as if you were an alien visiting Earth.
- Write a letter from one historical figure to another.
- Create a dialogue between a student and a time traveler.
- Write a short story with exactly 100 words.
- Create a poem in the shape of an object (concrete poetry).
- Write about a day when everything goes backward.
- Make up a commercial for an imaginary product.
- Write a ghost story set in your school.
- Describe your favorite place as if it were alive.
- Write a speech that inspires people to take action.
🔴 Challenge
- Write the first chapter of a fantasy novel.
- Create a script for a short film.
- Write a persuasive essay about why stories matter.
- Design a new myth to explain a natural phenomenon.
- Create a poem using only dialogue.
- Write a story that takes place in outer space.
- Develop a mystery with at least three suspects.
- Write a biography of a fictional character.
- Create a play about a world without rules.
- Write a love letter between two historical objects.
- Imagine the ending of a story you haven’t read yet.
- Create a series of haikus about daily life.
- Write a story where the main character doesn’t remember their name.
- Develop a script for a school radio show.
- Write about a journey across an imaginary land.
- Create a poem about hope in difficult times.
- Write a parody of a popular story or movie.
- Imagine two characters from different books meeting each other.
- Write a story that starts at the ending and works backward.
- Develop a collection of short poems about emotions.