Sally's Scraped Knee

Once upon a time, there was a little girl named Sally. She had two hands with five fingers each, two ears to hear with, and two eyes to see with. She also had a head, a nose, and a mouth.

One day, while playing outside, Sally fell and scraped her knee. She cried out in pain and put her hand on her injured knee. Her mother came running over and saw the scrape. "Don't worry, Sally," her mother said as she gently touched her daughter's head, "I'll kiss it and make it better." And she did just that, giving her knee a kiss with her mouth.

Sally's mother then helped her up, and they went inside to clean and bandage the scrape. From then on, Sally was more careful when she was playing and made sure to watch where she was going so she wouldn't fall again.

Sally learned that her body parts, like her hands, fingers, knees, ears, eyes, mouth, nose, and head, were important and needed to be taken care of. She also learned that when she was hurt, her mother's love and care could make it all better.

The end.

Reflections

  1. What did Sally learn about her body parts in the story?
  2. Why did Sally's mother kiss her scraped knee?
  3. How did Sally's actions change after her fall and scrape?

Can't find what you want?

Make your own custom game and worksheets in seconds for free!