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English Language Arts and Literacy | Grade : 6
Strand - Reading Literature
Cluster - Craft and Structure
[RL.6.6] - Explain how an author develops the point of view of the narrator or speaker in a text.
- Massachusetts Anchor Standards for Reading
- Massachusetts Anchor Standards for Reading
- Narrator
Person or voice relating a narrative; in fiction, may be a character who participates in the action or a voice external to the story. Some texts have multiple narrators. See Point of view. - Point of view
In the study of literary texts, the vantage point from which a story is told: for example, in the first-person point of view, the story is told by one of the characters, while in the third-person point of view, the story is told by someone outside the story. More broadly, point of view can refer to any position or perspective conveyed or represented by an author, narrator, speaker, or character. - Point of view
In the study of literary texts, the vantage point from which a story is told: for example, in the first-person point of view, the story is told by one of the characters, while in the third-person point of view, the story is told by someone outside the story. More broadly, point of view can refer to any position or perspective conveyed or represented by an author, narrator, speaker, or character. - Purpose
See Text Types and Purposes. - Speaker
(1) Person or character producing oral language, as in a speech or a dialogue; (2) in poetry, the narrator or voice a poet uses to relay a poem.
[RL.5.6] -
Describe how a narrator’s or speaker’s point of view influences how events are described in a story, myth, poem, or drama.
[RL.7.6] -
Analyze how an author develops and contrasts the points of view of different characters or narrators in a text.