This Grade 3 hard worksheet focuses on telling narrator point of view apart from character point of view. Grade 3 readers solve four multiple-choice questions and five fill-in-the-blank items that compare viewpoints and identify pronoun clues. The practice builds careful reading habits and helps Grade 3 learners meet CCSS RL.3.6 expectations with confidence every single day. It also introduces the word perspective as a helpful synonym used by many skilled readers.

Style:
Busy Bee
Point of View
Grade 3
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. A Grade 3 story says, The day was sunny, but Mia thought it was too hot. Whose words are too hot?
 A) The narrator's words
 B) Mia's point of view
 C) The sun's opinion
 D) The reader's idea
2. A Grade 3 narrator says, I felt proud of my team. What point of view is this?
 A) Third person
 B) Second person
 C) First person
 D) Mixed person
3. Jay thinks the new rule is unfair, but Tia thinks it is fair. This Grade 3 example shows what?
 A) Same viewpoint for both
 B) No character viewpoint
 C) Different character viewpoints
 D) Only narrator viewpoint
4. A Grade 3 narrator outside the story describes the weather. Whose POV is the weather from?
 A) A character's POV
 B) The narrator's POV
 C) The reader's POV
 D) No POV at all
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1) Readers can tell the narrator's Grade 3 POV apart from a character's POV by noticing who is speaking.
2) A Grade 3 first-person narrator is both a narrator and a character.
3) Two Grade 3 characters seeing one event in different ways show different perspectives.
4) A Grade 3 reader can compare viewpoints by asking what each character thinks.
5) When the Grade 3 narrator uses he or she, the narrator is in third person.
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9 Questions
12-18 minutes
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