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  1. SSAT Middle Level Writing
  2. Write a story that fits the given first sentence or prompt.

SSAT Middle Level • Writing

Write a story that fits the given first sentence or prompt.

Turn a starting sentence into a fun, complete story that admissions officers love.

SECTION 1

Why Story Prompts Matter in SSAT

Story writing has been around for thousands of years. People told tales around campfires to teach lessons and entertain. Today, tests like the SSAT use prompts to see how well you create stories.

Ancient Times
Oral Stories Begin
Storytellers shared adventures to build imagination.
1957
SSAT Starts
The SSAT began as a test for private schools.
1990s
Writing Sample Added
Schools wanted to see creative writing skills.
Today
Prompts for Narratives
Prompts test your ability to build full stories.

The SSAT Writing Sample is unscored but sent to schools. It shows your creativity and organization. You can shine by following a clear structure.

SECTION 2

Core Elements of a Great SSAT Story

A good story needs key parts to feel complete. These are like building blocks in a video game level. Learn them to make your writing strong.

1

Characters

Who is in the story? Give them feelings and goals.
2

Setting

Where and when does it happen? Paint a picture.
3

Conflict

The problem or challenge. It makes the story exciting.
4

Climax

The biggest moment. Everything changes here.
5

Resolution

How it ends. Tie up loose ends.
✦ Key Takeaway
Think of your story like a soccer game. Characters are players, conflict is the tough match, climax is the winning goal, and resolution is celebrating victory. You control the whole field!
SECTION 3

Visualizing the Story Arc

Visualizing the Story Arc Every great story follows a path — like climbing a mountain and coming back down. Exposition Setting & characters Rising Action Conflict builds ★ CLIMAX ★ The turning point! Falling Action Tension eases Resolution Story wraps up ↗ ↗ ↘ ↘ Story Progression → Tension / Drama Your story prompt becomes the starting point of the Exposition!
This diagram shows the story arc. Start slow, build excitement, peak at the climax, then wrap up.

See how the line climbs like a rollercoaster? Your story should follow this path from the prompt. It keeps readers hooked till the end.

SECTION 4

Step-by-Step: Building from a Prompt

Start with the given sentence. Add details step by step. This mechanism turns a prompt into a full tale.

  1. Read the prompt. Understand the starting point.
  2. Add setting and characters. Make it real.
  3. Build conflict. Create a problem.
  4. Reach the climax. Solve the big moment.
  5. End with resolution. Show what changes.

Practice these steps like leveling up in a game. Each one makes your story better. You will feel ready for any prompt!

SECTION 5

Breaking Down Characters and Plot

Breaking Down Characters and Plot: From Prompt to Full Story 1 Prompt Read the first sentence or writing prompt. "The door opened…" 2 Character & Setting Who is in the story? Where & when does it happen? Name, traits, place, time 3 Conflict & Climax What problem does the character face? What is the most exciting moment? Tension → turning point 4 Resolution How is the problem solved? Lesson learned or happy ending 💡 Underline key words in the prompt 💡 Use vivid details: looks, feels, sounds 💡 Make the reader wonder: what next? Start Build Peak End
Flowchart shows how a prompt leads to elements like character and conflict.

Each box builds on the last. Arrows show the flow, just like a river to the sea. Use this to organize your ideas fast.

SECTION 6

Worked Example: From Prompt to Story

Let's build a story together. Watch each step. You can do this on test day!

Prompt: "As I opened the mysterious box, I found..."

Step 1: Add Setting & Character

You are a curious kid in an old attic on a rainy day.
As I opened the mysterious box in the dusty attic, I found a glowing map.

Step 2: Introduce Conflict

The map leads to treasure, but a storm blocks the path.
A storm raged outside, making the adventure risky.

Step 3: Build to Climax

You face a locked gate during the storm.
Lightning flashed as I broke through the gate.

Step 4: Resolution

Find the treasure and learn bravery.
I returned home richer in courage than gold.
SECTION 7

Strengths and Common Mistakes

Compare to write stronger stories.
Do This (Strength)Don't Do This (Pitfall)
Use vivid details for setting.Skip descriptions; say 'it was dark' only.
Build clear conflict.Have no problem; story feels flat.
End with a lesson.Stop suddenly without wrap-up.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Avoid pitfalls like a gamer skips traps. Focus on do's to score big with schools.
SECTION 8

From SSAT to High School Writing

SSAT StoryAdvanced (High School)
Simple plot arc.Themes and symbols.
One main character.Multiple viewpoints.
25 minutes, fun tale.Essays with evidence.

Master SSAT stories now. They build skills for bigger writing later. You are on your way!

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
What is the main goal of the SSAT Writing Sample? A. Write a poem. B. Create a complete story from a prompt. C. List facts. D. Argue an opinion. E. Describe a picture.
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC PLOT
Prompt: "The bell rang..." Best next sentence? A. I ate lunch. B. I raced to the playground, but my friend was missing. C. School ended. D. Teacher spoke. E. Books fell.
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
For climax in "Lost in the woods...", choose: A. Walk home. B. Find berries. C. Hear a wolf howl and hide. D. See a bird. E. Sit down.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Prompt: "The robot woke up..." Best resolution? A. It sleeps. B. Powers down. C. Explodes. D. Helps its friend and learns about emotions. E. Runs away.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Weakest element in: "The dragon flew. Hero ran. Sword fight. Won."? A. Setting B. Characters C. No rising action or details. D. Resolution E. Conflict
SUMMARY

Review: Master SSAT Stories

Use the story arc from prompt: characters, conflict, climax, resolution. Avoid flat endings.

Practice steps like a game. Your stories will wow schools. Great job—you've got this!

Varsity Tutors • SSAT Middle Level • Write a story that fits the given first sentence or prompt.