Point of View - Parent Activity Guide

Help your child understand who tells the story and why it matters

What is Point of View?

Point of view (POV) is the perspective from which a story is told. It determines WHO is telling the story and WHAT readers can know. Fifth graders need to identify first person, third person limited, and third person omniscient POVs, and understand how the narrator's perspective influences how events are described.

On Florida's FAST assessment, students must identify POV and explain how it affects the reader's experience and understanding of events.

Key Vocabulary

First Person: A character tells their own story using "I" and "me"
Third Person Limited: An outside narrator using "he/she" who knows only ONE character's thoughts
Third Person Omniscient: An "all-knowing" narrator who knows ALL characters' thoughts
Narrator: The voice that tells the story

FIRST PERSON

I, me, my, we

Character tells own story

THIRD LIMITED

he, she, they

Knows ONE mind

THIRD OMNISCIENT

he, she, they

Knows ALL minds

Activities to Try at Home

📚 POV Detective

While reading together, play "POV Detective" at the start of each book or chapter:

🎬 Movie POV Analysis

After watching a movie, discuss perspective:

Example: In Finding Nemo, we see both Marlin's journey AND what's happening to Nemo - that's like omniscient POV!

🔄 Retell from Another View

Take a familiar story and retell it from a different perspective:

This helps kids understand how POV changes what readers know and feel!

👥 Family Dinner Stories

At dinner, have family members tell about the same event from their own perspectives:

This shows how real-life perspectives work just like story POV!

Questions to Ask While Reading

Parent Tip: Two-Step Identification

Help your child use this two-step process:
Step 1: Look at pronouns. "I/me" = First Person. "He/she/they" = Third Person.
Step 2: Ask "Whose thoughts do we know?" If only one character = Limited. If multiple characters = Omniscient.

Remember: Just seeing "he" or "she" doesn't automatically mean omniscient - you have to check whose minds we can read!

Why Point of View Matters

First Person Effects

  • Readers feel close to the narrator
  • We only know what narrator knows
  • Other characters' true feelings are hidden
  • Narrator might be unreliable

Omniscient Effects

  • Readers see the "big picture"
  • We can know secrets characters don't
  • Creates dramatic irony
  • Less personal connection to one character

Informacion para Padres (Spanish Summary)

Que es el punto de vista? El punto de vista es la perspectiva desde la cual se cuenta una historia. Determina QUIEN cuenta la historia y QUE pueden saber los lectores.

Tres tipos de punto de vista:

Preguntas para hacer: