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Point of View Activities

Identifying the narrator's view point in a variety of texts is an essential reading skill.  Students are often assessed on their understanding of narrative perspective on standardized tests.  These point of view activities may help reinforce your students' understanding of point of view.

This page has tests, PowerPoint lessons, student-centered projects and more resources to help students master narrative perspective.

Looking for point of view worksheets? Check out this page.

Point of View Lesson 1
Looking for a point of view lesson? Here is a PowerPoint slide show covering the five narrative view points. It includes a practice activity with five questions at the end of the slide show. Check it out!
This is a preview image of Point of View Lesson 1. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Simple Point of View Lesson
Here's a simple point of view lesson. This PowerPoint slideshow covers first, second, and third-person narration. It also explains how to distinguish narration from dialogue. Also, there is a practice assignment after the lesson to help students review.
This is a preview image of Simple Point of View Lesson. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Modes of Narration Lesson
This animated PowerPoint lesson explains modes of third-person narration. It explains the differences between third-person objective, limited, and omniscient narration. It also includes practice problems after the lesson to reinforce the learning.
This is a preview image of Modes of Narration Lesson. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Practice Activity
Here's a hands-on activity to help students practice point of view skills. Students pass around copies of books and attempt to identify the narrator’s perspective. You choose the 8 books they will pass around (BYOB). It is helpful if you have multiple copies of each book so that students may work in groups.
This is a preview image of Point of View Practice Activity. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Comic Strip Project
Here's a fun and creative project to help students master point of view. In it they are required to create four comic strips, each demonstrating a different mode of narration. This project sheet contains examples as well as a scoring rubric to help guide evaluation.
This is a preview image of Point of View Comic Strip Project. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Flash Cards Project
In this point of view project, students create a set of note cards to help them understand narrative perspective. Each note card should include an example on one side and the name and definition on the other. Students should underline characters’ thoughts and feelings as revealed by the narrator in their examples.
This is a preview image of Point of View Flash Cards Project. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Manual Project
Here's another student-centered point of view project. In this one students create a manual defining and demonstrating each point of view. Then they provide readers with instructions on how to identify the narrator’s perspective. This one encourages students to synthesize their narrative knowledge.
This is a preview image of Point of View Manual Project. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Quiz 1
Looking for a way to quickly assess how well students can identify the narrator’s perspective? Check out this point of view quiz. This quiz answer 15 multiple-choice questions. Students read passages and determine the narrator’s perspective. They also match terms to definitions.
This is a preview image of Point of View Quiz 1. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Quiz 2
Here's another point of view quiz that you can use to quickly assess how well students can identify the narrator's perspective. This quiz features 15 more multiple-choice questions. Students read passages and determine the narrator's point of view and the mode of narration. They also match terms to definitions.
This is a preview image of Point of View Quiz 2. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Point of View Quiz 3
Here's yet another 15 question point of view quiz. Students read the passages and determine whether each is narrated from 1st, 2nd, or 3rd person perspective. It does not cover modes of narration like omniscient, limited, or objective. This might make it more appropriate for younger students or students who are still developing their skills.
This is a preview image of Point of View Quiz 3. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.
Viewpoint Pilot: Point of View Video Game
Students blast their way across the Universe while answering HUNDREDS of questions about point of view in this classic arcade-style shooter. Collect cool power-ups and outmaneuver over 20 different types of enemies. When students get hit, they must answer a question about point of view to proceed. In the early levels, students are quizzed on first, second, and third-person narration. In the later levels, students must distinguish between objective, limited, and omniscient narrative modes. What a fun way to master point of view.
This is a preview image of Viewpoint Pilot: Point of View Video Game. Click on it to enlarge it or view the source file.

Thanks for checking out my point of view activities! I wish you the greatest possible success on your educational journey.

Point of View
Common Core State Standards

Point of View Anchor Standard
R.6 (RL) - Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text.

RL.K.6 - With prompting and support, name the author and illustrator of a story and define the role of each in telling the story.
RL.1.6 - Identify who is telling the story at various points in a text.
RL.2.6 - Acknowledge differences in the points of view of characters, including by speaking in a different voice for each character when reading dialogue aloud.
RL.3.6 - Distinguish their own point of view from that of the narrator or those of the characters.
RL.4.6 - Compare and contrast the point of view from which different stories are narrated, including the difference between first- and third-person narrations.
RL.5.6 - Describe how a narrator’s or speaker’s point of view influences how events are described.
RL.6.6 - Explain how an author develops the point of view of the narrator or speaker in a text.
RL.7.6 - Analyze how an author develops and contrasts the points of view of different characters or narrators in a text.
RL.8.6 - Analyze how differences in the points of view of the characters and the audience or reader (e.g., created through the use of dramatic irony) create such effects as suspense or humor.
RL.9-10.6 - Analyze a particular point of view or cultural experience reflected in a work of literature from outside the United States, drawing on a wide reading of world literature.
RL.11-12.6 - Analyze a case in which grasping a point of view requires distinguishing what is directly stated in a text from what is really meant (e.g., satire, sarcasm, irony, or understatement).
Click to VIEW Grade Level Standards for R.6 (RL)
R.6 (RI) - Assess how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text.

RI.3.6 - Distinguish their own point of view from that of the author of a text.
RI.4.6 - Compare and contrast a firsthand and secondhand account of the same event or topic; describe the differences in focus and the information provided.
RI.6.6 - Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text and explain how it is conveyed in the text.
RI.7.6 - Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how the author distinguishes his or her position from that of others.
RI.8.6 - Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how the author acknowledges and responds to conflicting evidence or viewpoints.
RI.9-10.6 - Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text and analyze how an author uses rhetoric to advance that point of view or purpose.
RI.11-12.6 - Determine an author’s point of view or purpose in a text in which the rhetoric is particularly effective, analyzing how style and content contribute to the power, persuasiveness, or beauty of the text.
Click to VIEW Grade Level Standards for R.6 (RI)
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58 Comments

  1. Emilie

     /  October 30, 2023

    This app is amazing i love it it has helped me a lot.

    Reply
  2. andrea

     /  February 23, 2020

    Hi, I use your site often and I love the practice sheets. I’m having a hard time finding the answers to Point of View Test 2. The one that starts of with Super Easy Fun by Fun Tea Inc,

    Reply
  3. cecil knowles

     /  October 15, 2018

    how to use point view 1st 2nd 3rd ?

    Reply
  4. Loree Sprague

     /  November 27, 2017

    Wow! These suggestions and resources are fantastic. Thanks so much for sharing these. You are a generous soul!

    Reply
  5. micah britton

     /  March 13, 2017

    This is AMAZING!!!

    Reply
  6. Barber Ben

     /  January 12, 2017

    Life saver

    Reply
  7. Sherlon Cloud

     /  January 7, 2017

    As a teacher and a parent, these examples are awesome.

    Reply
  8. rosa

     /  December 1, 2015

    A life-saver!

    Reply
  9. Kikoh

     /  July 2, 2015

    Excellent. Thank You!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Reply
  10. Laila

     /  July 2, 2015

    Really Good Website!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Reply
  11. Tracy

     /  April 7, 2015

    This was such a helpful site. It gave me many tools to pick from to use in my classroom to help my students in their understanding of point of view.

    Reply
  12. demond smith

     /  March 25, 2014

    all the help has gave me a better understanding on a lot of things

    Reply
  13. Gay Holmes

     /  October 2, 2013

    You’ve provided a great resource for teaching P.O.V. I plan to share it with my other 5th grade teachers since we are preparing to teach this concept next.
    Thank you so much!

    Reply
  14. Mrs. Littrell

     /  September 24, 2013

    Thank you so much for sharing all of your hard work!! This has been very helpful to me. I appreciate your generous spirit!!

    Reply
  15. Shanna Nichols

     /  March 27, 2013

    I love this website! But I’m looking for something to help teach how to identify the point of view of media presentations. Could you please help me? This is something new and I’m not having very good luck finding things to use.

    Reply
    • I have nothing of the sort at this time. I will contact you if I create any material of this sort. Best wishes and I hope that you find what you are looking for.

      Reply
  16. Jennifer DeGerolamo

     /  March 10, 2013

    Thank you for taking the time to create such an amazing site. You provide such fantastic resources for teachers to access for free. I use the powerpoint presentations, activities, and worksheets all the time. Thanks again for using your time to create all these resources without charging a dime!

    Reply
  17. Paula Kavanagh

     /  February 28, 2013

    I am using this amazing resource of yours for homeschooling 8th grade/ 9th grade English and would like to know if you have the answers to the quizzes that you here on the point of view?

    Reply
  18. Heather Bolling

     /  February 27, 2013

    Mr. Morton,

    I have just found your site and have found this to be extremely helpful! I am a first year teacher and have been ‘borrowing’ many of your PowerPoint lessons and worksheets. We’re starting to review Point of View again tomorrow and I think that this time around I will be much better prepared. Thank you for sharing!

    Reply
  19. Robin Lawson

     /  January 24, 2013

    This is such a great resource! I loved using it with my eighth grade classes. thank you!

    Reply
  20. Bessie

     /  November 7, 2012

    Thanks for the POV site. I’m going to use it in class in the morning. I will be using some of the other stuff, but right now, this is awesome!

    Reply
  21. Mrs. Edwards

     /  July 11, 2012

    From Mrs. Edwards’ Middle School Korean Students: Thank you, Mr. Morton, for a great resource! Our class frequently looks through some of your pages in order to better understand basic concepts when language starts to fog our brains. These concepts assist us in preparing for English Universities where literature and writing is essential! –Incheon, South Korea

    (And thank you for providing a sometimes frustrated teacher with encouragement to keep pushing!)

    Reply
  22. Trish

     /  June 12, 2012

    This is an awesome website. It is helping me to prepare lessons for my child during summer break.
    Thank you!

    Reply
  23. yvonne davidson

     /  April 2, 2012

    great site thx for the help

    Reply
  24. Kfoster

     /  February 17, 2012

    I find myself returning again and again, I love your lessons and worksheets. We “flipped” my classroom this year to one on one student/laptops, your websites has really helped make the transition a success! Thanks!!!!

    Reply
  25. This is a really wonderful resource. I had to come up quickly with a point of view lesson(s) when I found many of my students failed a formative assessment on the topic. I scrambled to find some good material and came upon this website. It was a huge help. Simple, straightforward but rigorous and relevant. Thank you.

    Reply
  26. JB

     /  January 30, 2012

    All of these activities are really great! Thank you for compiling them!

    Reply
  27. Debbie

     /  January 24, 2012

    Thank you for all the wonderful plans and worksheets. This is one of the most helpful websites I have found.

    Reply
  28. Two words (out loud) THANK YOU!!!!

    Reply
  29. Teresa S

     /  January 2, 2012

    Thanks-Love the help, but where is the book passing activity -I must have missed this

    Reply
  30. Levonne Wheat

     /  December 28, 2011

    This website is the bomb!
    I was having a very difficult time trying to create a quiz for my students.
    Thanks for the blessing.

    Reply
  31. lVill

     /  December 2, 2011

    I love all of the wonderful activity ideas you have. Thank you soooo much!

    Reply
  32. Melissa D

     /  December 1, 2011

    This site is AMAZING!! Thank you for taking the time to create a useful site for teachers. Do you have an answer key for quiz 2? Thanks!!

    Reply
    • Mr. Morton

       /  December 1, 2011

      Not currently, though I plan on making some keys over the winter break. Thanks for visiting!

      Reply
  33. Obie Williams

     /  December 1, 2011

    I am a graduate student currently taking a class on teaching and tutoring writing. I just wanted to let you know that your Powerpoint presentations were quite helpful in giving me ideas for my mock lesson plans. Thank you, Mr. Morton.

    Reply
  34. Mary Dwiggins

     /  October 20, 2011

    All my students have Iphones or IPods and can take pictures. Do you have an activity using these devices to help with point of view?

    Reply
    • Mr. Morton

       /  November 7, 2011

      Well, not currently. But that sounds like the future talking, Mrs. Dwiggins.

      Reply
  35. mamateacher

     /  August 28, 2011

    It is 1:00 in the morning and I’ve ben trying to come up with a hands on activity for POV. I couldn’t think of one at all. Thank you for the book passing activity; it is just what I need!

    Reply
  36. Myisha

     /  May 19, 2011

    In your powerpoint slide on point of view, is it possible that you could tell me what you think the point of view was in the sample passages? My students and I were not sure about some of them. Thanks. Still love your site. 🙂

    Reply
    • Mr. Morton

       /  May 22, 2011

      Sorry this took so long:

      Answers for PowerPoint Practice Slideshow

      1. First-Person
      2. Third-Person Limited
      3. First-Person
      4. Third-Person Omniscient
      5. Third-Person Objective
      6. First-Person
      7. Third-Person Omniscient
      8. Second-Person
      9. Third-Person Limited
      10. Third-Person Objective

      Reply
      • Myisha

         /  May 26, 2011

        Thank you for any reply. I am not sure you are giving me the correct answers to the Point of View Powerpoint. Isn’t #3 “Foresight in Relationships” told in 2nd person? Please clear that up for me. Thanks.

        Reply
        • Kathi

           /  November 18, 2011

          Hello, again. I have the answers to the power point, but I am confused about which power point they go with? Can anyone help me with that?

          Reply
  37. There are two mistakes in the Point of View PowerPoint slides in the “7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens” In the last three lines it says ‘your’ instead of you’re. “If your hungry, eat.” (That’s wrong.) It should be, If you’re hungry, eat. There is the same mistake after that.

    Reply
    • Mr. Morton

       /  April 19, 2011

      I fixed those errors in the PowerPoint file. Thanks for bringing that to my attention. “You’re” help is invaluable. ;p

      Reply
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