This Grade 4 medium worksheet focuses on comparing two characters' perspectives within a single third person story. Fill-in items remind students that point of view shapes what readers know, while a matching activity reviews narrator pronoun habits. Students see that even in one third person tale, two siblings or friends can hold very different views of the same event. The activity strengthens Grade 4 close reading and analysis habits.
Style:
Point of View and Perspective
Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1. When a story is told by 'I,' the narrator is also a character in the story.
2. Second person speaks directly to the reader using the pronoun you.
3. Two siblings in one scene may have different perspectives about who started a fight.
4. The narrator's point of view shapes what the reader gets to know about events.
5. A first person narrator may not know the private thoughts of other characters.
6. A third person omniscient narrator can share every character's thoughts.
7. If the narrator uses he and she but only one character's thoughts, it is third limited.
8. Comparing two perspectives means looking for what each character notices differently.
9. Point of view and perspective both shape the meaning a reader takes from a story.
Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1. Match each item to its correct answer.
Narrator uses I
→ First person
First person
Narrator uses you
→ Second person
Second person
Narrator uses he/she only
→ Third person limited
Third person limited
Narrator knows all minds
→ Third person omniscient
Third person omniscient
Point of View and Perspective
★ Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) When a story is told by 'I,' the narrator is also a character in the story.
2) Second person speaks directly to the reader using the pronoun you.
3) Two siblings in one scene may have different perspectives about who started a fight.
4) The narrator's point of view shapes what the reader gets to know about events.
5) A first person narrator may not know the private thoughts of other characters.
6) A third person omniscient narrator can share every character's thoughts.
7) If the narrator uses he and she but only one character's thoughts, it is third limited.
8) Comparing two perspectives means looking for what each character notices differently.
9) Point of view and perspective both shape the meaning a reader takes from a story.
★ Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1) Match each item to its correct answer.
Narrator uses I
→ First person
First person
Narrator uses you
→ Second person
Second person
Narrator uses he/she only
→ Third person limited
Third person limited
Narrator knows all minds
→ Third person omniscient
Third person omniscient
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
10 Questions
10-15 minutes
Auto-graded
Retry anytime
🏆
Questions Correct
0
Correct
0
Incorrect
0
Skipped
0:00
Time
0%
Score
Review Your Answers
See what you got right, missed, or skipped.