Drafting with Purpose
Lesson Overview
Unit Title: Biography Writing Adventure
Lesson Number: 3 of 4
Lesson Title: Drafting the Biography: Putting Words on Paper
Year Group: Year 2
Subject: English
Length: 30 minutes
Class Size: 30 pupils
Curriculum Area:
Key Stage 1 – English
National Curriculum Objectives:
- Write for different purposes (Statutory requirements)
- Use expanded noun phrases to describe and specify
- Use sentences with different forms: statements, questions, exclamations and commands
- Begin to organise writing in logical narrative sequences
- Re-read what they have written to check that it makes sense
Lesson Aims
By the end of this session, pupils will:
- Begin drafting their biographies using their pre-prepared outlines and interview notes
- Use descriptive, engaging language appropriate to the subject
- Include at least one direct quote from their interviewee within their writing
- Understand how to develop a biography with a clear beginning, middle, and end
Success Criteria
Pupils will be successful if they:
- Write at least three sentences using complete ideas from their planning sheets
- Include one interesting fact about their subject
- Use at least one quote from their interviewee
- Use expanded noun phrases and conjunctions correctly in their writing
Key Vocabulary
| Word | Definition |
|---|
| Biography | A true story about someone’s life |
| Quote | The exact words someone said |
| Interesting | Something that makes others want to know more |
| Draft | A first version of a piece of writing |
| Descriptive Language | Words that help paint a picture in the reader’s mind |
Resources
- Pupils’ planning sheets from Lesson 2
- Interview quote sheets
- “Biography Sentence Starters” prompt cards
- Success criteria poster (large and laminated)
- Lined writing paper
- Pencils and erasers
- Timer/visual countdown
- “Biography Buzz Bin” – A small box with helpful adjectives and verbs
- A large egg timer or visual timer to support focus segments
Differentiation
Support:
- Sentence stems provided for EAL and lower ability pupils
- Adult support (TA or teacher) to circulate and scribe for select pupils who require transcribing support
- Use of visuals for key vocabulary
Challenge:
- Encourage higher ability pupils to use a simile or rhetorical question
- Ask more able writers to include a brief emotion or reaction related to their subject's achievement
Teaching and Learning Activities
⏱️ Introduction (5 minutes) – Whole Class
Teach:
- Recap from Lesson 2 about who we chose to write about and what we learned. Do a quick “Who is your person?” circle share – each pupil says their subject’s name and one fact.
- Show the laminated success criteria and explain that today we are starting our very first biography draft. Reinforce that it doesn’t have to be perfect – it’s a starting point!
Interactive Hook:
- Teacher reads aloud a two-sentence made-up example: “My grandad, Leo, was the fastest knitter in Nottingham. He always said, ‘There’s no mess that wool can’t fix!’”
Ask: What makes this good writing? Listen for: quote use, interesting fact, fun language!
⏱️ Main Activity (20 minutes) – Independent Writing & Guided Support
Step 1 – Quick Plan Review (3 minutes):
Pupils look over their planning sheets from Lesson 2 and re-read a quote they chose to include.
Step 2 – Drafting Time (15 minutes):
- Pupils begin writing based on their plan.
- First focus: One or two sentences about who their person is (name, connection).
- Second focus: A “WOW fact” using descriptive language (e.g., “He once caught three salmon in one afternoon!”)
- Third focus: Choose and write a direct quote—practice using speech marks if taught.
Teacher & TA Roles:
- Begin with a roaming conference approach — visit tables and hear one sentence aloud before asking the child to write it.
- Highlight children using especially powerful adjectives or interesting strategies aloud (e.g., “Wow! Listen to what Layla wrote…”)
Extension (for early finishers):
- Add a second quote from the person
- Use an adjective or simile from the “Biography Buzz Bin”
⏱️ Plenary (5 minutes) – Author’s Chair + Reflection
Activity:
- Select 2-3 children to sit in the Author’s Chair and read one “WOW” sentence aloud.
- Class gives a thumbs up for powerful sentences, and selects one descriptive word “we really liked!”
Reflection Questions (displayed on board for volunteers):
- What was the easiest part of your writing today?
- What quote or fact made your biography special?
- What do you want to do next time to stretch your writing?
Teacher ends by announcing a secret mission: "Tomorrow you'll become editors – just like real writers! So try to spot things in your writing you might change."
Assessment for Learning (AfL)
- Formative Observation: Monitor pupil engagement during drafting. Note any misuse of punctuation or lack of descriptive vocabulary for small group support in next lesson.
- Pupil Passports: Self-assessment cards with statements:
- “I used a fun fact!”
- “I included a quote!”
- “I made it interesting!”
- Pupils tick these off before putting their drafts away.
Reflection/Next Steps for Teacher
- Note which pupils may need additional support with structure or spelling in Lesson 4
- Prepare checklist-based peer editing cards for tomorrow’s lesson
- Display a few gold-standard paragraphs on the wall for next session
Cross-Curricular Links
- History: Understanding people’s life stories and significant achievements
- Speaking and Listening: Rehearsing sentences aloud before writing
- PSHE: Valuing people and their unique contributions
Teaching Tips ✨
- Try using a “Magpie Moment” board where you pin up brilliant phrases students create – they can borrow from each other next lesson!
- Keep energy up by using a short musical cue when writing begins (“Ready to Write” theme).
- Let children act out a quote before writing it – adds movement and anchors meaning!
This lesson turns young learners into confident biographers by bridging structure with creativity through manageable, meaningful steps.