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Four Types of Writing

In our Four Types of Writing lesson plan, students learn about the four main types of writing, including their characteristics and how to identify them. Students practice identifying which type a piece of writing is and learn when to use each type.

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Our Four Types of Writing lesson plan introduces students to the four different types of writing with an overview of each. Students learn the difference between each, how each type is used, and to identify when to use each type. Students utilize their research and creative writing skills in order to find examples of each type of writing online with a partner. Individually, students are also asked to match types of writing with given sentences in order to test their understanding of the lesson.

At the end of the lesson, students will be able to list the four main types of writing and define and identify each writing type.

State Educational Standards: LB.ELA-LITERACY.W.4.4, LB.ELA-LITERACY.W.5.4, LB.ELA-LITERACY.W.6.4

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General Education

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A piece’s writing style can help you figure out what kind of writing it is, what its purpose is, and how the author’s voice is unique. With so many different types of writing, you may think it’s difficult to figure out the specific writing style of a piece or you'll need to search through a long list of writing styles.

However, there are actually just four main types of writing styles, and together they cover practically all the writing you see, from textbooks to novels, to billboards and more.  Whether you’re studying writing styles for class or trying to develop your own writing style and looking for information, we’ve got you covered.

In this guide, we explain the four styles of writing, provide examples for each one, go over the one thing you need to know to identify writing style, and give tips to help you develop your own unique style of writing.

The 4 Types of Writing

There are four main different styles of writing. We discuss each of them below, list where you’re likely to see them, and include an example so you can see for yourself what each of the writing styles looks like.

Writers who use the narrative style are telling a story with a plot and characters. It’s the most common writing style for fiction, although nonfiction can also be narrative writing as long as its focus is on characters, what they do, and what happens to them.

Common Places You’d See Narrative Writing

  • Biography or autobiography
  • Short stories
  • Journals or diaries

“We had luncheon in the dining-room, darkened too against the heat, and drank down nervous gayety with the cold ale. ‘What’ll we do with ourselves this afternoon?’ cried Daisy, ‘and the day after that, and the next thirty years?’    ‘Don’t be morbid,’ Jordan said. ‘Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.’ ‘But it’s so hot,’ insisted Daisy, on the verge of tears, ‘and everything’s so confused. Let’s all go to town!’ - The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

You can quickly tell that this passage from the novel The Great Gatsby is an example of narrative writing because it has the two key traits: characters and a plot. The group is discussing eating and drinking while trying to decide what to do for the rest of the day.

As in this example, narrative writing often has extended dialogue scenes since the dialogue is used to move the plot along and give readers greater insight into the characters.

Writers use the expository style when they are trying to explain a concept. Expository writing is fact-based and doesn’t include the author’s opinions or background. It’s basically giving facts from the writer to the reader.

Common Places You’d See Expository Writing

  • Newspaper articles
  • Academic journals
  • Business memos
  • Manuals for electronics
  • How-to books and articles

“The 1995/1996 reintroduction of gray wolves (Canis lupus) into Yellowstone National Park after a 70 year absence has allowed for studies of tri-trophic cascades involving wolves, elk (Cervus elaphus), and plant species such as aspen (Populus tremuloides), cottonwoods (Populus spp.), and willows (Salix spp.). To investigate the status of this cascade, in September of 2010 we repeated an earlier survey of aspen and measured browsing and heights of young aspen in 97 stands along four streams in the Lamar River catchment of the park’s northern winter range. We found that browsing on the five tallest young aspen in each stand decreased from 100% of all measured leaders in 1998 to means of <25% in the uplands and <20% in riparian areas by 2010. Correspondingly, aspen recruitment (i.e., growth of seedlings/sprouts above the browse level of ungulates) increased as browsing decreased over time in these same stands.” -”Trophic cascades in Yellowstone: The first 15 years after wolf reintroduction” by William J. Ripple and Robert L. Beschta

This abstract from an academic journal article is clearly expository because it only focuses on facts. The authors aren’t giving their opinion of wolves of Yellowstone, they’re not telling a story about the wolves, and the only descriptions are number of trees, streams, etc. so readers can understand the study better.

Because expository writing is focused on facts, without any unnecessary details or stories, the writing can sometimes feel dense and dry to read.

Descriptive

Descriptive writing is, as you may guess, when the author describes something. The writer could be describing a place, person, or an object, but descriptive writing will always include lots of details so the reader can get a clear and complete idea of what is being written about.

Common Places You’d See Descriptive Writing

  • Fiction passages that describe something

“In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or eat: it was a hobbit hole and that means comfort. It had a perfectly round door like a porthole, painted green, with a shiny yellow brass knob in the exact middle. The door opened on to a tube-shaped hall like a tunnel: a very comfortable tunnel without smoke, with panelled walls, and floors tiled and carpeted...” - The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

This is the opening passage of the novel The Hobbit . While The Hobbit is primarily an example of narrative writing, since it explores the adventures of the hobbit and his companions, this scene is definitely descriptive. There is no plot or action going on in this passage; the point is to explain to readers exactly what the hobbit’s home looks like so they can get a clear picture of it while they read. There are lots of details, including the color of the door and exactly where the doorknob is placed.

You won’t often find long pieces of writing that are purely descriptive writing, since they’d be pretty boring to read (nothing would happen in them), instead many pieces of writing, including The Hobbit , will primarily be one of the other writing styles with some descriptive writing passages scattered throughout.

When you’re trying to persuade the reader to think a certain way or do a certain thing, you’ll use persuasive writing to try to convince them.  Your end goal could be to get the reader to purchase something you’re selling, give you a job, give an acquaintance of yours a job, or simply agree with your opinion on a topic.

Common Places You’d See Persuasive Writing

  • Advertisements
  • Cover letters
  • Opinion articles/letters to the editor
  • Letters of recommendation
  • Reviews of books/movies/restaurants etc.
  • Letter to a politician

“What General Weygand called the Battle of France is over. I expect that the battle of Britain is about to begin. Upon this battle depends the survival of Christian civilization. Upon it depends our own British life, and the long continuity of our institutions and our Empire. The whole fury and might of the enemy must very soon be turned on us. Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If we can stand up to him, all Europe may be free and the life of the world may move forward into broad, sunlit uplands. But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink by the lights of perverted science. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves, that if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’ - “This was their finest hour” by Winston Churchill

In this excerpt from his famous “Their finest hour” speech, Prime Minister Winston Churchill is clearing trying to convince his audience to see his viewpoint, and he lays out the actions he thinks they should take. In this case, Churchill is speaking to the House of Commons (knowing many other British people would also hear the speech), and he’s trying to prepare the British for the coming war and convince them how important it is to fight.

He emphasizes how important the fight will be (“Upon this battle depends the survival of the Christian civilization.” and clearly spells out what he thinks his audience should do (“Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties…”).

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Common Writing Styles to Know

Each of the four main types of writing styles has multiple subsets of styles within it. Here are nine of the most common and important types of writing you’ll see.

Narrative Writing

Character voice.

Character voice is a common writing style in novels. Instead of having an unknown narrator, the audience knows who is telling the story. This first-person narrator can help the reader relate more both to the narrator and the storyline since knowing who is telling a story can help the reader feel more connected to it. Sometimes the narrator is completely truthful in telling what happens, while other times they are an unreliable narrator and will mislead or outright lie to readers to make themselves look better. 

To Kill a Mockingbird (Scout is the narrator) and The Hunger Games (Katniss is the narrator) are two examples of this writing style.

Stream-of-Consciousness

This writing style attempts to emulate the thought process of the character. Instead of only writing about what the character says or does, stream-of-consciousness will include all or most of the characters thoughts, even if they jump from one topic to another randomly or include incomplete thoughts.

For example, rather than writing “I decided to take a walk to the ice cream shop,” an author using the stream-of-consciousness writing style could write, “It’s pretty hot out, and I feel like I should eat something, but I’m not really that hungry. I wonder if we have leftovers of the burgers Mom made last night? Is Mom staying late at work tonight? I can’t remember if she said. Ice cream would be a good choice, and not too filling. I can’t drive there though because my car is still in for repairs. Why is the repair shop taking so long? I should have listened when David said to check for reviews online before choosing a place. I should text David later to see how he is. He’ll think I’m mad at him if I don’t. I guess I’ll just have to walk to the shop.”

James Joyce and William Faulkner are two of the most well-known writers to have regularly used the  stream-of-consciousness writing style.

Epistolary writing uses a series of documents, such as letters, diary entries, newspaper articles, or even text messages to tell a story. They don’t have a narrator, there’s just whoever purportedly gathered the documents together. This writing style can provide different points of view because a different person can be the author of each document.

Well-known examples of epistolary writing include the novels Dracula  (written as a series of letters, newspaper articles, and diary entries) and Frankenstein (written as a series of letters).

Expository Writing

You’ll find this style in textbooks or academic journal articles. It’ll focus on teaching a topic or discussing an experiment,  be heavy on facts, and include any sources it cited to get the information. Academic writing often assumes some previous knowledge of the topic and is more focused on providing information than being entertaining, which can make it difficult to read and understand at times.

Business writing refers to the writing done in a workplace. It can include reports, memos, and press releases. Business writing typically has a formal tone and standard formatting rules. Because employees are presumably very busy at work, business writing is very concise and to the point, without any additional flourishes intended to make the writing more interesting.

You’ll see this writing style most commonly in newspaper articles. It focuses on giving the facts in a concise, clear, and easy-to-understand way. Journalists often try to balance covering all the key facts, keeping their articles brief, and making the audience interested in the story.

This writing style is used to give information to people in a specific field, such as an explanation of a new computer programming system to people who work in software, a description of how to install pipes within a house for plumbers, or a guide to new gene modifications for microbiologists.

Technical writing is highly specialized for a certain occupational field. It assumes a high level of knowledge on the topic, and it focuses on sharing large amounts of information with the reader. If you’re not in that field, technical writing can be nearly impossible to understand because of the jargon and references to topics and facts you likely don’t know.

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Descriptive Writing

Poetry is one of the most challenging styles of writing to define since it can come in many forms. In general, poems use rhythmic language and careful word choice to express an idea. A poem can be an example of descriptive writing or narrative writing, depending on whether it’s describing something or telling a story. Poetry doesn’t need to rhyme, and it often won’t follow standard grammatical or structural rules. Line breaks can, and often do, occur in the middle of sentences.

Persuasive Writing

Copywriting.

Copywriting is writing that is done for advertising or marketing purposes. It’s attempting to get the reader to buy whatever the writer is trying to sell. Examples of copywriting include catalogs, billboards, ads in newspapers or magazines, and social media ads.

In an attempt to get the reader to spend their money, copywriters may use techniques such as descriptive language (“This vanilla was harvested from the lush and exotic island of Madagascar"), exciting language (Stop what you’re doing and learn about this new product that will transform your life!”) and exaggeration (“This is the best cup of coffee you will ever taste!”).

Opinion 

People write opinion pieces for the purpose of stating their beliefs on a certain topic and to try to get readers to agree with them. You can see opinion pieces in newspaper opinion sections, certain blog posts, and some social media posts. The quality of opinion writing can vary widely. Some papers or sites will only publish opinion pieces if all the facts in them can be backed up by evidence, but other opinion pieces, especially those that are self-published online, don't go through any fact-checking process and can include inaccuracies and misinformation.

What If You’re Unsure of a Work’s Writing Style?

If you’re reading a piece of writing and are unsure of its main writing style, how can you figure which style it is? The best method is to think about what the purpose or main idea of the writing is. Each of the four main writing styles has a specific purpose:

  • Descriptive: to describe things
  • Expository: to give facts
  • Narrative: to tell a story
  • Persuasive: to convince the reader of something

Here’s an example of a passage with a somewhat ambiguous writing style:

It can be tricky to determine the writing style of many poems since poetry is so varied and can fit many styles. For this poem, you might at first think it has a narrative writing style, since it begins with a narrator mentioning a walk he took after church. Character + plot = narrative writing style, right?

Before you decide, you need to read the entire passage. Once you do, it’ll become clear that there really isn’t much narrative. There’s a narrator, and he’s taking a walk to get a birch from another man, but that’s about all we have for character development and plot. We don’t know anything about the narrator or his friend’s personality, what’s going to happen next, what his motivations are, etc.

The poem doesn’t devote any space to that, instead, the majority of the lines are spent describing the scene. The narrator mentions the heat, scent of sap, the sound of frogs, what the ground is like, etc. It’s clear that, since the majority of the piece is dedicated to describing the scene, this is an example of descriptive writing.

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How Can You Develop Your Own Writing Style?

A distinctive writing style is one of the hallmarks of a good writer, but how can you develop your own? Below are four tips to follow.

Read Many Different Styles of Writing

If you don’t read lots of different kinds of writing, you won’t be able to write in those styles, so before you try to get your own writing style, read different writing styles than what you’re used to.  This doesn’t mean that, if you mostly read novels, you suddenly need to shift to reading computer manuals. Instead, you can try to read novels that use unreliable narrators, stream-of-consciousness writing, etc.

The more you read, the more writing styles you’ll be exposed to, and the easier it’ll be able to combine some of those into your own writing style.

Consider Combining Multiple Types of Writing Styles

There’s no rule that you can only use one style for a piece of writing. In fact, many longer works will include multiple styles. A novel may be primarily narrative, but it can also contain highly descriptive passages as well as expository parts when the author wants the readers to understand a new concept.

However, make sure you don’t jump around too much. A paper or book that goes from dense academic text to impassioned plea for a cause to a story about your childhood and back again will confuse readers and make it difficult for them to understand the point you’re trying to make.

Find a Balance Between Comfort and Boundary-Pushing

You should write in a style that feels natural to you, since that will be what comes most easily and what feels most authentic to the reader. An academic who never ventures outside the city trying to write a book from the perspective of a weathered, unschooled cowboy may end up with writing that seems fake and forced.

A great way to change up your writing and see where it can be improved is to rewrite certain parts in a new writing style.  If you’ve been writing a novel with narrative voice, change a few scenes to stream-of-consciousness, then think about how it felt to be using that style and if you think it improved your writing or gave you any new ideas. If you’re worried that some writing you did is dull and lacking depth, add in a few passages that are purely descriptive and see if they help bring the writing to life.

You don’t always need to do this, and you don’t need to keep the new additions in what you wrote, but trying new things will help you get a better idea of what you want your own style to be like.

The best way to develop your own writing style is to expose yourself to numerous types of writing, both through reading and writing. As you come into contact with more writing styles and try them out for yourself, you’ll naturally begin to develop a writing style that you feel comfortable with.

Summary: The 4 Different Styles of Writing

There are four main writing styles, and each has a different purpose:

If you’re struggling to figure out the writing style of a piece, ask yourself what its purpose is and why the author wants you to read it.

To develop your own writing style, you should:

  • Read widely
  • Consider mixing styles
  • Balance writing what you know and trying new things

What's Next?

Literary devices are also an important part of understanding writing styles. Learn the 24 literary devices you must know by reading our guide on literary devices.

Writing a research paper for school but not sure what to write about?   Our guide to research paper topics has over 100 topics in ten categories so you can be sure to find the perfect topic for you. 

Are you reading  The Great Gatsby for class or even just for fun?  Then you'll definitely want to check out our expert guides on the biggest themes in this classic book, from love and relationships to money and materialism .

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Christine graduated from Michigan State University with degrees in Environmental Biology and Geography and received her Master's from Duke University. In high school she scored in the 99th percentile on the SAT and was named a National Merit Finalist. She has taught English and biology in several countries.

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Concepts taught in this unit plan

  • Students gauge the differentiation between each writing style and are actively encouraged to try each type.
  • Repetitive concept to increase students knowledge.
  • Key learning points:
  • Worksheet focuses on helping students write in different ways to really develop both their handwriting & their style of writing.
  • Engages their brain in critical thinking.

Table of Contents

Included in this worksheet pack

1: Postcards Worksheet 2: Wish you were here Worksheet 3: Diaries Worksheet 4: Dear Diary Worksheet 5: Thank you letters Worksheet 6: Thank you for Worksheet 7: Recipies Worksheet 8: What’s cooking Worksheet

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39 comments.

I don’t want to download the extension!

Yeah, I wouldn’t download any extensions unless you know who made them and what they are doing. Generally a bad idea.

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A great help this website has been! Keep going guys

This website has saved me in the time of covid, I love that the kids can do the online version, and play old school games with a purpose.

This site is great for homeschoolers, thank you so much!

Josh Hichamuru

This website has helped me in English, I got my grades up to an A thanks to your website!

Amazing website. Thank you for sharing. It helps me so much when I tutor a 6 grader on writing and reading.

I teach middle school ELA. First, I would like to express my appreciation to you for creating this website to help students, parents and educators. I came across your website, began reviewing the posted materials and immediately realized that you are an outstanding, dedicated educator. Your materials are innovative, credible and researched. Your passion is evident and has inspired me to follow your example! I, now… am one of your students.

You are too kind. Thank you for visiting and taking the time to comment.

This site has saved me so much time and stress! I teach middle school (I’m in my second year of teaching), and I have no resources from my county. I am so grateful that you have shared these resources! I use or adapt a lot of your materials, which has allowed me to have a little bit of personal time when I get home every day. Thank you for all that you do!

Your experience sounds a bit like mine. I’m happy to be able to help and thankful that you took the time to share.

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This is honestly the best website I have ever used. Thank you being so generous for sharing resources and not requiring people to sign up to access resources. I love that you have so many resources categorized by so many skills!

I’m an 8th grade teacher from Nigeria and just found Ereadingworksheets.com a few days ago. It is helping me to plan and organize my lessons better . I really find it useful. Thank you so much!

The Internet is a beautiful thing. I’m glad that you found me. Best wishes!

i have not used any of the material yet but will comment when I have.

I thought you said you would come back to comment.

This isn’t because it took me 10 months to approve your original comment is it?

Ah well, I forgive you.

Thank you for your invaluable help.

I’m a second year special education teacher with high-functioning students on the Autism Spectrum. This site has been INVALUABLE to me–thank you for being one of the few FREE sites with great resources!! Keep up the excellent work you do 🙂

I’m honored and blessed to be able to help you.

I am a middle school teacher, and this website is a great resource for so many of my lessons. Thank you E reading! Keep up the great work!

Okay – I literally have no words right now!! This website is a homeschooler’s dream come true! Where have you been all my life!!! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and making this available! I have been searching for something like this for a few years and I stumbled upon it today. There are not many good writing curriculums out there and I’ve been beating my head against the wall. I’m just about to start school and this website is going to make my life so much easier!!

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This is a fantastic resource and I am grateful to have it! Thank you

i love this website. its so interesting!!

This is a very impressive site with lots of tools for help. Thank you very much.

Many research topics list were interesting to me. Thank you for sharing. it’s very educational.

I am so glad I came across this while searching for some of the figure of speech. This is really helpful as i am preparing for my SAT and TOEFL exam. Thank you so much!!

Great website really helped me learn 🙂

Is there anything in the works for argumentative writing? Thank you for the free access to all of your hard work.

Thank you for your excellent work, it has changed the my son’s way of reading. It’s very helpful.

Thanks so much for all the hard work you have put into this site. It is full of great tools for my students!

this is so cool makes learn faster

Thank you for all what I found on this site. The comprehension sheets were helpful and all the wonderful ideas given will benefit many teachers worldwide.

thanks you helped me a lot on my report on my speechs

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Thank you so much! I just discovered your materials while looking for something new for a student I will be tutoring this summer. These are wonderful resources! This has taken a lot of work and I am very appreciative!

So effective and simple too

These are great for Socratic Seminars! Thank you!

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Very interesting

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Carol Watson

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Writing different types of sentences

Grammar and Writing Workbook for Grade 4

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Use a variety of sentence types

Students write different types of sentences (declarative, imperative, interrogative, exclamatory) about given topics in these writing worksheets.

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  1. (PDF) 4 Types of Writing

    4 types of writing worksheet pdf

  2. 4 Types Of Writing Worksheet

    4 types of writing worksheet pdf

  3. Four Types of Writing Printable

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  4. 4 Types of Writing worksheet

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  5. 4 Types Of Writing Worksheets

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  6. 4 Types Of Writing Worksheets

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  1. Forms of Writing

  2. 11 Types of Creative Writing (PART 1)

  3. Product Link in Bio ( # 1334 ) @MaviGadgets✅ Sublimation Mug Heat Press Printer Machine #gadget

  4. The Fours Modes of Writing

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COMMENTS

  1. PDF Fo u r Ty p e s o f Wr it in g Wo r k s h e e t

    Four Types of Writing Worksheet. Part 1: Understanding the Four Types of Writing. Narrative - Writing in which the author tells a story. The story could be fact or fiction. Persuasive - Writing that aims to convince or persuade the reader to take a certain action or to influence the reader. Expository - Writing in which the author's ...

  2. Four Types of Writing worksheet

    Types of Writing, Narrative, Descriptive, Expository, Persuasive Liveworksheets transforms your traditional printable worksheets into self-correcting interactive exercises that the students can do online and send to the teacher.

  3. Four Types of Writing, Free PDF Download

    In our Four Types of Writing lesson plan, students learn about the four main types of writing, including their characteristics and how to identify them. Students practice identifying which type a piece of writing is and learn when to use each type. Categories: Downloadable, Language Arts Tags: 4th Grade, 5th Grade, 6th Grade.

  4. Types of Writing Facts & Worksheets

    The four types of writing are descriptive writing, expository writing, narrative writing, and persuasive writing. Further on in your studies, when you begin reading and composing different types of essays, you will encounter many other kinds of writing. However, all of these generally fall into these four main categories.

  5. Four Types of Writing: English ESL worksheets pdf & doc

    Descriptions of the four types of writing. Donate a coffee. English ESL Worksheets. Four Types of Writing. Four Types of Writing. cyndikay. 308. 8. 2. 0. 1/1 ...

  6. Understanding the 4 Writing Styles: How to Identify and Use Them

    Expository: to give facts. Narrative: to tell a story. Persuasive: to convince the reader of something. If you're struggling to figure out the writing style of a piece, ask yourself what its purpose is and why the author wants you to read it. To develop your own writing style, you should:

  7. Types of Writing Teaching Resources

    Types of Writing Teaching Resources. Explore the different types of writing with your students this school year with printable RACES writing strategy worksheets, constructed response activities, graphic organizers and more teacher resources created by teachers for teachers. This collection of curriculum-aligned teaching resources has been ...

  8. PDF Different types of writing

    means text that was invented by the writer. y. If you want to, do the same thing by choosing an extract from a. nonfiction. book. s. Write the paragraph on a separate sheet of paper. Remember: Nonfiction. means that the informative in the piece of writing is factual.

  9. PDF About Writing: A Guide

    There are four main types of writing: expository, descriptive, persuasive, and narrative. Each of these writing styles is used for a specific purpose. A single text may include more than one writing style. EXPOSITORY. Expository writing is one of the most common types of writing. When an author writes in an expository style, all they are trying ...

  10. PDF Writing Styles

    Each of the four types of writing are explained below. Expository Expository writing is a general category of the written word. This includes all writing except persuasive writing. The main purpose is to explain a concept or idea using details for support. This type of writing is usually written based on facts, not opinions.

  11. Types Of Writing Worksheets

    Each worksheet within the pack is tailored around a specific writing style. These range from Diary writing to postcard & recipe writing. Unique skills your students will love to learn! Concepts taught in this unit plan. Students gauge the differentiation between each writing style and are actively encouraged to try each type.

  12. Writing

    Writing. In my opinion, the teaching of writing deserves its own class; however, more often than not I find that schools bundle writing into the reading program. The purpose of this web page is to provide teachers and students will information, resources, activities, and worksheets that will help them to better understand good writing practices.

  13. Quiz & Worksheet

    This quiz and worksheet allow students to test the following skills: Reading comprehension - ensure that you draw the most important information from the related lesson on types of writing styles ...

  14. Writing Worksheet Categories

    These free worksheets cover a wide range of writing forms and provide tons of practice exercises. Writing is an excellent tool to pass knowledge from generation to the other. ... The Different Types of Writing Styles. 1. Narrative. Narrative writing is a form of storytelling. It takes your reader on a journey with a start, middle, and end.

  15. Four Types of Writing: Key Points

    There are four main types of writing: expository, descriptive, persuasive, and narrative. Expository writing explains or informs without opinions. Descriptive writing focuses on communicating details vividly. Persuasive writing tries to convince readers of a point of view through reasons and arguments. Narrative writing tells a story with characters and dialogue. Knowing these four types is ...

  16. Types of Writing Teaching Resources for 4th Grade

    Explore the different types of writing with your students this school year with printable RACES writing strategy worksheets, constructed response activities,...

  17. The Four Types of Writing worksheet

    This reviews the 4 types of writing. Liveworksheets transforms your traditional printable worksheets into self-correcting interactive exercises that the students can do online and send to the teacher.

  18. PDF Types of Paragraphs

    Depending on the purpose for writing, a writer must develop one of the four types of paragraphs: expository (to explain or inform), persuasive (to persuade), descriptive (to describe), or narrative (to tell a story). The Persuasive Paragraph. The persuasive paragraph is an attempt by the writer to convince the audience (readers) to agree with ...

  19. Four types of Writing interactive worksheet

    Liveworksheets transforms your traditional printable worksheets into self-correcting interactive exercises that the students can do online and send to the teacher. ... writing (1061835) Main content: 4 types of writing (2086794) What are the 4 types of writing. Other contents ... Pinterest Twitter Whatsapp Download PDF Loading ad ...

  20. PDF The four parts of a paragraph

    4. To sum up, four components make up the basic structure of a paragraph. Activity Type Reading and Writing Exercises: short answer questions, matching, writing sentences, paraphrasing Focus Basic paragraph structure Aim To review the four basic parts of an academic paragraph and practice writing topic sentences, supporting ideas,

  21. Modes of Writing interactive worksheet

    samples of the four types of writing. Liveworksheets transforms your traditional printable worksheets into self-correcting interactive exercises that the students can do online and send to the teacher. ... The four writing purposes (1215485) samples of the four types of writing. Other contents: Narrative, descriptive, expository and persuasive

  22. Writing different types of sentences worksheets

    Use a variety of sentence types. Students write different types of sentences (declarative, imperative, interrogative, exclamatory) about given topics in these writing worksheets. Worksheet #1 Worksheet #2 Worksheet #3. Worksheet #4 Worksheet #5. Similar: Introductory clauses Double negatives.