

This Grade 4 worksheet on Point of View (Narrative Writing) helps students understand how the narrator’s perspective changes the way a story is told. Using the story “The Art Competition,” learners explore the difference between first-person and third-person narration and how pronouns shape storytelling.
Through comprehension questions, rewriting tasks, multiple choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, and paragraph writing, students practise identifying and switching between points of view. This worksheet builds clarity in narration, strengthens grammar skills, and helps children understand how perspective influences emotions and storytelling style.
Understanding point of view is important because:
1. It helps students identify who is telling the story.
2. It teaches correct use of pronouns like I, my, she, and her.
3. It changes how readers connect with the character.
4. It improves clarity and consistency in storytelling.
🧠 Exercise 1 – Identify the Point of View
Students answer questions about who is telling the story and identify pronouns used in first-person and third-person narration.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Change the Point of View
Students rewrite a paragraph from third-person to first-person, practising pronoun shifts and narrator perspective.
📋 Exercise 3 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students select correct answers related to pronouns and types of point of view.
📝 Exercise 4 – Fill in the Blanks
Using a word bank (narrator, I, she, story, first-person, third-person), students complete sentences about narration.
✨ Exercise 5 – Write Your Own Paragraph
Students write 4–5 sentences about a school event using first-person point of view with “I” and “my.”
Exercise 1 – Answer the Questions
1. The first story is told by the character herself (Riya / the narrator using “I”).
2. Pronouns that show first-person point of view are: I, my.
3. Pronouns that show third-person point of view are: she, her, Riya.
4. The story feels more personal and direct in first-person, while third-person feels like someone else is describing the event.
Exercise 2 – Rewritten in First-Person
I was nervous before the spelling test. I tapped my pencil and looked around the classroom. My hands felt cold as the teacher said, “Start now.”
(Answers may vary.)
Exercise 3 – Multiple Choice
1. b) I
2. c) She
3. a) First-person
4. c) Third-person
Exercise 4 – Fill in the Blanks
1. narrator
2. I
3. she
4. first-person
5. third-person
Exercise 5 – Sample Paragraph
I felt excited when my name was called during the assembly. I walked up to the stage holding my certificate tightly. My heart was beating fast, but I smiled proudly at my friends. It was one of the happiest moments of my school year.
(Answers may vary.)
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It helps them understand who is telling the story and how.
They teach kids to express thoughts consistently from one perspective.
Read stories and ask “Who is speaking here?”