

This Grade 6 worksheet introduces students to the concept of flashbacks in storytelling, an important literature skill that helps readers understand past events within a story. Through carefully designed exercises, learners explore how writers shift from present action to earlier moments, building deeper comprehension of characters and plot development.
Flashbacks play a key role in storytelling and comprehension. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Flashbacks help reveal important past events in a story.
2. They explain characters’ emotions, actions, and motivations.
3. They make stories more engaging and layered.
4. They strengthen reading comprehension and analytical thinking skills.
This worksheet includes five engaging activities that build understanding of flashbacks:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Identify the Flashback
Students choose the correct option that shows whether a sentence describes a flashback or not. This helps them recognize shifts in time within a story.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Students select the correct word related to flashbacks (like memory, flashback, scene) to complete sentences meaningfully.
📋 Exercise 3 – True or False
Students decide whether each sentence correctly explains a flashback concept, strengthening conceptual clarity.
📝 Exercise 4 – Underline the Flashback
Students read sentences and underline the part that shows a flashback, improving their ability to identify past references.
🧩 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
Students complete a paragraph using suitable flashback-related words, applying their understanding in context.
This worksheet builds strong literary skills by helping learners connect past and present events in stories in an engaging and age-appropriate way.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. a) The scene moves to an earlier time.
2. b) The moment shows a scene from the past.
3. a) The text shows an earlier experience.
4. a) The scene shows a past moment.
5. b) The situation shows a past moment.
6. b) The moment shows a past scene.
7. a) The scene shows present time.
8. b) The scene shows a past event.
9. b) The situation shows an earlier experience.
10. a) The moment shows a past moment.
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. flashback
2. scene
3. memory
4. moment
5. past
6. detail
7. event
8. story
9. image
10. tale
Exercise 3 – True/False
1. False
2. True
3. True
4. False
5. False
6. True
7. False
8. True
9. True
10. False
Exercise 4 – Underline the Flashbacks
1. remembered winning it in Pune
2. recalled his childhood days
3. recalled his village journey
4. thought of a school picnic
5. remembered her birthday party
6. thought of her school farewell
7. remembered playing cricket there
8. thought of her first teacher
9. thought of a family festival
10. remembered her friends
Exercise 5 – Complete the Paragraph
During a calm evening in Chennai, Kavya read a story where *flashback* took her into *past* from her grandmother’s town. She imagined *colorful* streets, bright lamps, and *festivals* during festivals. As she turned the pages, another *flashback* appeared, showing children playing near *old* temples and houses. The writer described *moments* so clearly that Kavya felt she was there. Later, she closed the book but kept thinking about those *memories*. That night, her mind created a vivid *image* that formed a strong *memory*.
Take your child’s storytelling skills to the next level by helping them understand how stories travel through time with flashbacks.
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A flashback is a storytelling technique where the narrative shifts to an earlier event to give background or explain a character’s past.
Students can look for time shifts, past events, or phrases that indicate a return to an earlier moment in the story.
It helps improve comprehension by allowing learners to understand character development and plot details more clearly in English worksheets.