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The First Week Worksheet

The First Week Worksheet

About This Worksheet
The First Week is a grade 7 reading comprehension worksheet focused on analyzing first-person point of view in narrative text. It is a middle school language arts resource designed to help students understand how perspective shapes meaning. The passage follows a student adjusting to a new school and reflects personal emotions and growth. For example, feeling invisible becomes growing confidence by the end. This worksheet strengthens students’ ability to analyze narrative voice and its effect on readers.

Curriculum and Grade Alignment
This worksheet is intended for Grade 7 students and targets point-of-view analysis. The primary learning goal is to examine how first-person narration influences understanding of events and emotions. Students should already be able to identify narrative perspective before completing this activity. The next progression skill involves comparing how different narrators present similar events. This resource aligns with CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.7.6, which focuses on analyzing how an author develops and contrasts points of view.

Student Tasks
On this worksheet, students will read a first-person narrative about starting at a new school. They identify clues that reveal the story’s perspective. Learners explain how the narrator’s emotions are conveyed through specific details. Students analyze what readers would not know if the story were told differently. The final questions require evaluating how point of view contributes to the hopeful tone at the end.

Common Challenges and Misconceptions
Students may confuse first-person narration with third-person limited perspective. Some learners might summarize events instead of analyzing how perspective shapes understanding. Others may struggle to articulate what is unique to the narrator’s internal thoughts. Identifying emotional nuance can also be challenging. Teachers can model comparing first- and third-person passages to highlight differences.

Implementation Guidance
Teachers can use this worksheet during a unit on narrative techniques or point of view. It works well as guided analysis before students write their own first-person narratives. Small group discussions can help clarify how perspective influences tone. Homeschool educators may read the passage aloud and discuss emotional cues together. The worksheet also serves as a formative assessment for literary analysis skills.

Details and Features
The worksheet includes a complete narrative passage followed by structured analytical questions. Prompts focus on both identification and explanation of perspective. The layout allows space for thoughtful written responses. The printable format is suitable for classroom or home use. The relatable school setting increases student engagement.