

This Grade 3 English worksheet on Imaginative and Creative Writing encourages young learners to explore their imagination while strengthening paragraph and story writing skills. Through five engaging exercises—including imaginative prompts, picture-based writing, fantasy storytelling, and keyword-based story creation—students learn to express ideas clearly and creatively in structured paragraphs.
Why Imaginative and Creative Writing Matters in Grammar?
Creative writing builds more than imagination—it strengthens grammar, sentence formation, and logical sequencing. For Class 3 learners, this topic is important because:
1. It enhances vocabulary and descriptive language.
2. It develops structured paragraph and story writing skills.
3. It improves logical thinking through problem-and-solution storytelling.
4. It builds confidence in expressing original ideas.
This worksheet includes five creativity-boosting writing activities designed for young storytellers:
🧠 Exercise 1 – If I Were a Bird…
Students write an imaginative paragraph beginning with “If I were a bird, I would…” They describe where they would fly, what they would do, and how they would feel. This builds descriptive and emotional expression skills.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Picture-Based Paragraph Writing
Students observe a lively park scene and write a paragraph describing what they see. The picture includes children playing on swings and slides, kicking a football, sitting on benches, and enjoying nature. This improves observation and descriptive writing skills.
📋 Exercise 3 – Short Story: A Lost Key
Students create a short story about a lost key, including who lost it, why it was important, and how the problem was solved. This develops narrative structure and problem-solving storytelling.
📝 Exercise 4 – Fantasy World Story
Learners imagine a magical place such as a fairy land, underwater city, or space world. They include magical characters and show how magic solves a problem. This enhances imagination while reinforcing story structure.
🌊 Exercise 5 – Story Using Three Words (river, boat, storm)
Students write a story using all three words, starting with a setting and building toward a problem and resolution. This strengthens vocabulary integration and sequencing skills.
Exercise 1 – If I Were a Bird
Sample Answer:
If I were a bird, I would fly high in the blue sky over mountains and forests. I would sing sweet songs and build a nest in a tall tree. I would visit different cities and help other birds find food. I would feel happy, free, and excited to explore the world.
Exercise 2 – Picture-Based Paragraph
Sample Answer:
The picture shows children playing happily in a park. Some children are swinging and sliding, while others are playing football. A few children are sitting on benches and talking. There are trees, flowers, and birds around them. Everyone looks cheerful and active in the beautiful park.
Exercise 3 – A Lost Key
Sample Answer:
Riya lost her house key in the playground. The key was important because it opened her front door. She searched everywhere and asked her friends for help. They looked under the slide and near the swings. Finally, they found it near the sandbox. Riya was relieved and promised to keep her keys safely.
Exercise 4 – Fantasy Story
Sample Answer:
In a magical underwater city, a little mermaid found that the sea lights had stopped glowing. The city became dark and scary. She asked a wise turtle for help. Using a magic shell, they brought back the shining lights. The city sparkled again, and everyone cheered happily.
Exercise 5 – Story Using River, Boat, Storm
Sample Answer:
One day, my family and I went near a river for a picnic. We decided to ride in a small boat. Suddenly, a big storm began, and the waves became rough. We stayed calm and rowed carefully toward the shore. Soon, the storm stopped, and we reached safely. We learned to always check the weather before boating.
Unlock your child’s imagination with structured creative writing practice that turns ideas into powerful stories and confident communication skills.
🔖Book a free trial!
Creative writing encourages students to invent ideas, characters, and situations freely.
It develops imagination, expressive language, and storytelling ability.
It builds confidence and allows children to explore ideas beyond everyday writing.