Watermelon Writing Prompt-One Magic Seed-Fairy Tale

This is a fun watermelon writing prompt. It’s a fairy tale that can be used with any fruit or vegetable that has visible seeds.  Furthermore, it’s a prompt that can easily be written in the fall about an apple or pumpkin

For the sake of this fairy tale lesson, I’m going to use watermelon. Feel free to bring a watermelon to share with your students. It’s a big hit and definitely motivates them to write. In addition, eating watermelon is a great reward for students when they finish their writing. Try to bring watermelon to any watermelon writing prompt that students may write.

Watermelon writing prompt, One Seed-Fairy Tale

NOW FOR THE MAGIC SEED LESSON!

To get a full understanding on how I conduct each writing lesson you may want to read the Writing Prompts Introduction post.  The lesson outlined below (and all other prompts posted) will make more sense and be easier to follow and use.  Here’s the lined paper I use for Grades K-2 and Grades 2-7

Common Core State Standards

NOTE: This lesson can address the following Common Core Standards: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.K.3, RL.1.3, RL.1.7, RL.2.3, RL.3.3, RL.4.3, RL.5.3   

Tell the Story Line:

  1. First, tell the general story line:  “Today you’re going to write a fairy tale.  In the fairy tale, there’s a legend about a magical watermelon seed.  Greedy people try to get it.  A poor humble family stumbles upon it and uses it for good.”
  2. Second, encourage your students to think about the following questions:

a. What does the legend say?
b. How do the greedy people behave?
c. How does the poor family get the seed?
d. What magical thing does the seed actually do?
e. How does the poor family respond?

Brainstorm

3. Third, have the students brainstorm answers to the questions. 

(If they can’t think of anything on their own, you can share some of the ideas below.)

a. The legend says that the seed will grow gold, grow golden watermelons, grow watermelons with golden seeds inside etc.

b. The greedy people fight over watermelons at the market, steal watermelons, smash watermelons, look continuously for the magical watermelon etc.

c. A watermelon rolls into their yard, they pick up a broken watermelon, one just so happens to grow behind their hut, they get the lucky watermelon, etc.

d. The seed produces golden stalks, golden watermelons, watermelons with seeds of gold, etc.

e. The poor family quietly leaves town and builds an orphanage (or something charitable).  OR, they become wealthy and rule the town in a positive way.  Or they secretly give golden seeds to specific people etc.

4. Fourth, give the students a 1-2 minutes to think about their story.

Show the 5 Sections

Lastly, show the 5 sections:

Setting and Legend

Greedy behavior

Poor Family

The Seed is Found

Good Fortune

As mentioned in my writing prompts introduction:  K-1st Graders are encouraged to write 1 sentence for each section, 2nd Graders 2 sentences, 3rd Graders 3 sentences and so on.

NOW TO WRITE!

Guide the students through the following steps.  They are free to use their own words.  Remind them that ANYTHING can happen in their story as long as they follow the steps to keep their story organized. (There are sample sentences for your own guidance.)

Setting and Legend
  1. Introduce the setting.  Name the town, state or region.

Long ago in the hills of Scotland, there was a town called Bluestone. 

2. Describe the legend in detail.

There was a legend that said one day a watermelon would hold a magical seed.  The seed would grow small golden watermelons.  Those golden watermelons would have seeds that would grow more golden watermelons.

Greedy Behavior

3. Describe how the greedy people behaved.  Write out their actions, thoughts and conversations. 

Every summer the townspeople would fight over watermelons at the market.  They would push to get the biggest ones.  “Hey!  I was here first!” they often shouted.  They would steal watermelons.  Even worse, they dropped and smashed them on purpose to look inside. 

The Poor Family

4. Describe the poor family’s attitude by writing out their actions and words.

However, the Ainsley’s were different.  They were a quiet, poor family.  They were friendly and didn’t seem bothered by the legend.  Each summer they went to the market and bought one watermelon.  It was a treat that they all looked forward to.   

The Seed Is Found

5. Write out the events on how the family got the watermelon with the magical seed.

This year was no different.  They took home their watermelon and enjoyed every bite.  About a month later, they noticed something shiny in their trash pile.  The father looked more closely.  It was a small golden watermelon!

The Good Fortune

6. Tell what the family decided to do with their fortune.

The Ainsley’s didn’t announce their fortune.  They decided to move to the other side of Scotland.  They built a home where they could house, feed and take care of orphans happily ever after.

7. Conclude the fairy tale by mentioning the greedy people.  Did their behavior change? 

The townspeople never knew about the Ainsley’s fortune and are still fighting over watermelons.

Print the Lesson

EASY ART ACCENT

Once students finish they can complete their simple watermelon art accent. These easy art accents can go with any watermelon writing prompt.

Here’s the start to two different stories:

watermelon writing prompt, Fairy Tale-sample 1
watermelon writing prompt, Fairy Tale-Sample 2

GAMES TO PLAY!

Correct the Paragraph

A child corrects a paragraph

The Penny Game (naming fruits and vegetables that have seeds)

A child counts pennies

How Many Words? (using the word watermelon)

Watermelon title, marker and paper

Thank you to Vijaya narasimha from Pixabay for this post’s featured image.