This Grade 4 easy sheet centers on pronoun charts and short story openings to lock in POV vocabulary. Students sort I, you, and he into columns, label first-, second-, and third-person narrators, and explain why second-person stories feel unusual. Sentence-correction items fix wrong POV labels, fill-in items reinforce pronoun groups, and short-answer prompts ask students to compare narrators. Every example uses friendly Grade 4 contexts so the focus stays on identifying the storyteller behind the words.

Style:
Busy Bee
Point of View and Perspective
Grade 4
★ Part A: Fix the Sentence
Each sentence has an error. Rewrite it correctly on the line.
1) Fix the sentence:
The pronouns 'you' and 'your' belong in the first-person column of a POV chart.
Rewrite: The pronouns 'you' and 'your' belong in the second-person column of a POV chart.
2) Fix the sentence:
A story that begins, 'You walk into the cave alone,' is written in third-person point of view.
Rewrite: A story that begins, 'You walk into the cave alone,' is written in second-person point of view.
3) Fix the sentence:
If a narrator says 'we ran' to mean herself and her brother, the story is written in third person.
Rewrite: If a narrator says 'we ran' to mean herself and her brother, the story is written in first person.
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) The pronoun 'we' is a first-person plural pronoun used by narrators inside the story.
2) A choose-your-own-adventure book that says, 'You open the door,' uses second person.
3) The pronouns 'they,' 'them,' and 'their' belong to the third person on a pronoun chart.
4) If the narrator never says 'I' and only watches the characters, the story is in third person.
★ Part C: Short Answer
Answer each question in one or two complete sentences.
1) How does a pronoun chart help you decide what point of view a story uses?
The chart sorts I, you, and he into columns, so you can match the narrator's pronouns to first, second, or third person quickly.
2) Why is second-person point of view rare in children's books?
Second person tells readers, 'You do this,' which feels strange because most stories let readers watch characters instead of being them.
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