This Grade 3 hard worksheet asks readers to compare how two characters see the same event. Grade 3 learners answer four multiple-choice questions about classic tales like the three little pigs and complete five fill-in-the-blank items about viewpoints. The activities help Grade 3 students notice different perspectives and tell a narrator's point of view from a character's point of view.
Style:
Point of View
Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. The wolf says the pigs were mean to him. The pigs say the wolf tried to eat them. What is this Grade 3 example?
A) Two characters with different points of view
B) One narrator with one point of view
C) A first-person narrator only
D) A story with no point of view
2. A Grade 3 story says, He was scared, but Sam thought it looked fun. Whose point of view is Sam's?
A) The narrator's point of view
B) The character's point of view
C) The reader's point of view
D) The author's point of view
3. A Grade 3 narrator outside the story tells it using she. What POV is this?
A) First person
B) Second person
C) Third person
D) No point of view
4. In a Grade 3 tale, Ana loves rain but Leo hates it. What does this show?
A) The same point of view
B) Only the narrator's view
C) Different character viewpoints
D) No viewpoint at all
Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1. When two Grade 3 characters see one event in different ways, they have different viewpoints.
2. A Grade 3 narrator can tell a story while a character inside has a different point of view.
3. In Little Red Riding Hood, the wolf's Grade 3 viewpoint is he is only hungry.
4. Red Riding Hood's Grade 3 viewpoint is that the wolf is scary.
5. Comparing two Grade 3 viewpoints helps readers understand each character better.
Point of View
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. The wolf says the pigs were mean to him. The pigs say the wolf tried to eat them. What is this Grade 3 example?
A) Two characters with different points of view
B) One narrator with one point of view
C) A first-person narrator only
D) A story with no point of view
2. A Grade 3 story says, He was scared, but Sam thought it looked fun. Whose point of view is Sam's?
A) The narrator's point of view
B) The character's point of view
C) The reader's point of view
D) The author's point of view
3. A Grade 3 narrator outside the story tells it using she. What POV is this?
A) First person
B) Second person
C) Third person
D) No point of view
4. In a Grade 3 tale, Ana loves rain but Leo hates it. What does this show?
A) The same point of view
B) Only the narrator's view
C) Different character viewpoints
D) No viewpoint at all
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1) When two Grade 3 characters see one event in different ways, they have different viewpoints.
2) A Grade 3 narrator can tell a story while a character inside has a different point of view.
3) In Little Red Riding Hood, the wolf's Grade 3 viewpoint is he is only hungry.
4) Red Riding Hood's Grade 3 viewpoint is that the wolf is scary.
5) Comparing two Grade 3 viewpoints helps readers understand each character better.
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
9 Questions
12-18 minutes
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