This Grade 3 Point of View worksheet compares two characters' perspectives on the same event, such as a race, parade, or snowstorm. Multiple-choice questions ask students to spot shared events and explain why feelings differ. Fill-in tasks reinforce vocabulary like perspective, point of view, and feelings. Hints support careful reading and thoughtful comparison. Engaging Grade 3 practice builds higher-level thinking about how two narrators can view one moment differently in stories.
Style:
Point of View
Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Maya says, 'I was so proud when I won the race.' Kai says, 'I was sad when I lost to Maya.' What event are both describing?
A) A spelling test
B) A race
C) A birthday party
D) A field trip
2. In Maya's view, the race felt exciting and happy. In Kai's view, the same race felt sad. What does this show?
A) The race did not really happen
B) Different characters can feel different ways about the same event
C) Only one of them is telling the truth
D) Feelings are always the same
3. Rosa says, 'I loved the loud parade.' Ben says, 'I covered my ears because it was too loud.' Whose perspective finds the parade fun?
A) Ben's
B) Both of them
C) Rosa's
D) Neither of them
4. Two friends describe the same snowstorm. Why might their points of view differ?
A) They made up the storm
B) They had different feelings and experiences during the storm
C) One was not there
D) Stories cannot differ
Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1. Two characters telling about the same event can have different points of view.
2. A character's perspective is shaped by their feelings and experiences.
3. If one narrator is happy and another is sad about the same game, their perspectives differ.
4. Comparing two characters' points of view helps readers understand a story better.
5. When two friends describe a storm, each shares their own point of view.
Point of View
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Maya says, 'I was so proud when I won the race.' Kai says, 'I was sad when I lost to Maya.' What event are both describing?
A) A spelling test
B) A race
C) A birthday party
D) A field trip
2. In Maya's view, the race felt exciting and happy. In Kai's view, the same race felt sad. What does this show?
A) The race did not really happen
B) Different characters can feel different ways about the same event
C) Only one of them is telling the truth
D) Feelings are always the same
3. Rosa says, 'I loved the loud parade.' Ben says, 'I covered my ears because it was too loud.' Whose perspective finds the parade fun?
A) Ben's
B) Both of them
C) Rosa's
D) Neither of them
4. Two friends describe the same snowstorm. Why might their points of view differ?
A) They made up the storm
B) They had different feelings and experiences during the storm
C) One was not there
D) Stories cannot differ
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1) Two characters telling about the same event can have different points of view.
2) A character's perspective is shaped by their feelings and experiences.
3) If one narrator is happy and another is sad about the same game, their perspectives differ.
4) Comparing two characters' points of view helps readers understand a story better.
5) When two friends describe a storm, each shares their own point of view.
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
9 Questions
12-18 minutes
Auto-graded
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