teaching-resource

Doctors Fact File and Report Writing Scaffold

  • Updated

    Updated: 09 Jul 2024

Support your students in writing a report about doctors with this fact file and writing scaffold.

  • Pages

    Pages: 4 Pages

  • Curriculum
  • Grades

    Grades: 3 - 5

teaching-resource

Doctors Fact File and Report Writing Scaffold

  • Updated

    Updated: 09 Jul 2024

Support your students in writing a report about doctors with this fact file and writing scaffold.

  • Pages

    Pages: 4 Pages

  • Curriculum
  • Grades

    Grades: 3 - 5

Support your students in writing a report about doctors with this fact file and writing scaffold.

Write an Expository Text About Doctors

When it comes to teaching students how to write a new text type, experienced teachers know that scaffolding is the key to success!

This scaffolding writing activity has been designed by our experienced teacher team to help your students write an expository text about doctors. Students are guided through the process of writing full sentences from dot points (contained in the fact file), then using these to construct a complete text. Students should be encouraged to add any additional relevant facts they know about doctors to their report.

The fact file contains the following information about doctors:

  • Who are they?
  • What do they do?
  • What equipment do they use?
  • What skills do they have?

The resource download includes:

  • Fact file
  • Writing sentences from dot points worksheet
  • Report writing scaffold

This resource downloads as a:

  • Full-color PDF
  • Black-and-white PDF
  • Google Slides (containing both a color and a black-and-white fact file)

Teach How to Write a Report

This doctors fact file and writing scaffold will teach your students how to write a factual report by focusing on the following three skills:

  1. Writing Sentences from Dot Points – Students practice converting dot points into complete sentences, which helps them learn how to expand on key information and form coherent thoughts without plagiarising their sources!
  2. Grouping Like Facts into Paragraphs – By organizing related sentences into paragraphs, students learn how to group similar information together, enhancing their ability to structure an informative text logically.
  3. Using a Writing Scaffold – The scaffold provides a clear outline for students to follow, helping them understand the flow of an information report and ensuring they include all necessary components.

Download to Teach Expository Writing

Use the dropdown menu on the Download button above to access your preferred version of this resource. (Note: You will be prompted to make a copy of the Google Slides template before accessing it.)

Keen to save paper? Why not project the fact files on your interactive whiteboard rather than making copies for students? The environment will thank you for it!

More Teacher-Created Activities for Expository Writing

Teach Starter has a wide range of resources to support you in teaching informative writing to your students. Click below to explore a sample of our offering!

[resource:2658998] [resource:70801] [resource:4804502]

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