This Grade 3 Point of View worksheet focuses on first-person narrators through diary entries, letters, and journal passages. Students correct sentences that mix up pronouns, fill in missing words about I, me, and my, and judge true or false statements about first-person stories. Clear hints guide learners to spot the narrator as a character inside the text. Printable Grade 3 practice builds confidence identifying first-person point of view in familiar everyday writing forms.

Style:
Busy Bee
Point of View
Grade 3
★ Part A: Fix the Sentence
Each sentence has an error. Rewrite it correctly on the line.
1) Fix the sentence:
In her diary, Maya wrote: 'She felt nervous about the test.'
Rewrite: In her diary, Maya wrote: 'I felt nervous about the test.'
2) Fix the sentence:
The letter began, 'Dear Grandma, he hopes you are well.'
Rewrite: The letter began, 'Dear Grandma, I hope you are well.'
3) Fix the sentence:
Tim's journal said, 'Today they went to the zoo and saw tigers.'
Rewrite: Tim's journal said, 'Today I went to the zoo and saw tigers.'
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) A story told using the word I is written in first person.
2) In a first-person story, the narrator is a character in the story.
3) A diary entry that says 'I felt happy' uses first-person point of view.
4) First-person narrators share their own thoughts and feelings.
★ Part C: True or False?
Read each statement. Circle True or False.
1) A diary entry that starts with 'I woke up early today' is written in first-person point of view.
True
False
2) A letter signed 'Love, Ben' that uses 'I miss you' is written in third-person point of view.
True
False
3) First-person narrators can tell readers about their own feelings and thoughts.
True
False
🎯

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