This Grade 4 medium sheet pushes students to compare two versions of the same scene told by different characters or narrators. Students fill in vocabulary like perspective, omniscient, and limited, and they match narrator descriptions to the right POV label. The matching activity sorts first-person, second-person, third-person limited, and third-person omniscient narrators. Short-answer reasoning is replaced with a deeper fill set that explores what each version reveals and what each narrator hides from readers.
Style:
Point of View and Perspective
Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1. When the narrator is outside the story and uses 'he,' the point of view is third person.
2. A story told from a character's own thoughts and feelings is in first-person perspective.
3. If two characters tell the same scene differently, each one shares a different perspective.
4. A narrator who can read the minds of all characters is called third-person omniscient.
5. A narrator who only knows one character's thoughts is third-person limited.
6. When a scene is told twice from two characters, readers learn more about each character's feelings.
7. Matching a story to its narrator means asking who is telling, not who is in the story.
8. If one version shows fear and another shows excitement, the scenes share different perspectives.
9. An author chooses a narrator carefully because the choice changes what the reader can see.
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 who says 'I'
→ Third-person omniscient
Third-person omniscient
Narrator outside who knows everyone
→ Second-person narrator
Second-person narrator
Narrator outside, one mind only
→ First-person narrator
First-person narrator
Narrator who says 'you'
→ Third-person limited
Third-person limited
Point of View and Perspective
★ Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) When the narrator is outside the story and uses 'he,' the point of view is third person.
2) A story told from a character's own thoughts and feelings is in first-person perspective.
3) If two characters tell the same scene differently, each one shares a different perspective.
4) A narrator who can read the minds of all characters is called third-person omniscient.
5) A narrator who only knows one character's thoughts is third-person limited.
6) When a scene is told twice from two characters, readers learn more about each character's feelings.
7) Matching a story to its narrator means asking who is telling, not who is in the story.
8) If one version shows fear and another shows excitement, the scenes share different perspectives.
9) An author chooses a narrator carefully because the choice changes what the reader can see.
★ 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 who says 'I'
→ Third-person omniscient
Third-person omniscient
Narrator outside who knows everyone
→ Second-person narrator
Second-person narrator
Narrator outside, one mind only
→ First-person narrator
First-person narrator
Narrator who says 'you'
→ Third-person limited
Third-person limited
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
10 Questions
10-15 minutes
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