
English (ELA) • Year 4 • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
This is lesson 4 of 4 in the unit "Perspectives in Writing". Lesson Title: Third Person Perspective: Observing the World Lesson Description: In the final lesson, students will explore the third person point of view, which uses 'he,' 'she,' and 'they.' They will learn how this perspective allows for a broader view of the story. Students will read a short story and then rewrite a scene from a third person perspective, emphasizing character actions and thoughts.
By the end of the lesson, students will:
Objective: Help students distinguish between different narrative perspectives.
Engaging Hook: Write three sentences on the board:
Ask the class:
Mini Discussion: Introduce the concept of third-person perspective — it tells the story from an outside viewpoint, using he, she, they, or character names.
Objective: Identify third-person narration in a short story.
Introduce Short Story: Read a paragraph from a familiar fairy tale (e.g., "Little Red Riding Hood") in third person.
Class Discussion:
Compare Perspectives: Read the same passage rewritten in first person:
Objective: Rewrite a first-person scene into third person, adding insights about multiple characters.
Provide a short scene in first person (on the board or handout):
Challenge: Rewrite the scene in third person, adding more details about what both characters might be thinking or doing.
Extension: Encourage early finishers to expand on the scene by describing another character’s thoughts or actions.
Objective: Students reflect on their writing choices and receive peer feedback.
Pair students up and ask them to read each other’s rewritten scenes aloud.
Prompt discussion with these questions:
Class Reflections: Ask a few students to read their work aloud to the whole class. Guide a discussion on how third-person perspective broadens the reader’s experience.
✅ Informal observation during discussions.
✅ Monitoring independent writing for correct third-person use.
✅ Peer feedback during pair sharing.
✔ A short third-person passage (printed or on slides)
✔ First-person passage for rewriting task
✔ Whiteboard and markers
✔ Writing notebooks
Teacher Tip: Use a dramatic voice when reading aloud to bring perspective differences to life!
🔹 Which students need more practice with perspective?
🔹 Do students understand how different perspectives change the reader's experience?
By the end of this final lesson in the unit, students should feel confident in using third-person perspective and thinking critically about why perspective matters in storytelling. 🚀
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