
Point of View (Review)
Authored by Molly Schroeder
English
7th Grade
CCSS covered
Used 6+ times

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15 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
The narrator is the
Tags
CCSS.RL.6.6
CCSS.RL.7.6
CCSS.RL.1.6
CCSS.RL.5.6
CCSS.RL.8.6
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
To determine the author's point of view, you need to look at
the characters thoughts.
the first sentence of the book.
the dialogue.
what the characters say to each other.
Tags
CCSS.RL.6.6
CCSS.RL.7.6
CCSS.RI.7.6
CCSS.RI.7.9
CCSS.RI.8.6
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
A type of narrative perspective in where the author uses pronouns like ''your" and "you."
Tags
CCSS.L.1.1D
CCSS.L.3.1A
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
How can you know that something is written in first person point of view?
Tags
CCSS.RL.6.6
CCSS.RL.7.6
CCSS.RL.1.6
CCSS.RL.5.6
CCSS.RL.8.6
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
How to grill by Steven Raichlen
Once you have your grill assembled, the next thing to decide is where to put it. A grill puts out a lot of heat, so you should position it several feet away from the side of the house or any plants or shrubbery. You'll have an easier time with a spot that is sheltered from the wind. When positioning a grill on a wooden deck, remember that sparks and live embers can fall from a charcoal grill.
Tags
CCSS.RL.6.6
CCSS.RL.7.6
CCSS.RL.1.6
CCSS.RL.5.6
CCSS.RL.8.6
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt
At dawn, Mae Tuck set out on her horse for the wood at the edge of the village of Treegap. She was going there, as she did once every ten years, to meet her two sons, Miles and Jesse, and she was feeling at ease. At noon time, Winnie Foster, whose family owned the Treegap wood, lost her patience at last and decided to think about running away.
Tags
CCSS.RL.5.3
CCSS.RL.5.7
CCSS.RL.6.3
CCSS.RL.6.9
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Alice's adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, John Tenniel
Alice was beginning to get very tired of sitting by her sister on the bank, and of having nothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the book her sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, "and what is the use of a book," thought Alice, "without pictures or conversations?" So she was considering, in her own mind whether the pleasure of making a daisy-chain would be worth the trouble of getting up and picking the daisies, when suddenly a White Rabbit with pink eyes ran close by her.
third-limited
first-person
third-omniscient
Tags
CCSS.RL.6.6
CCSS.RL.7.6
CCSS.RL.1.6
CCSS.RL.5.6
CCSS.RL.8.6
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