Class 7 Literature Worksheet on Bias vs Objectivity

Class 7 Literature Worksheet on Bias vs Objectivity
Class 7 Literature Worksheet on Bias vs Objectivity

Class 7 Literature Worksheet on Bias vs Objectivity

English GrammarClass 7EnglishFree DownloadPDF
Archita Srivastava
Archita SrivastavaVisit Profile
I am a lively and dynamic educator with four years of teaching experience across online and offline classrooms. I began my journey as a private tutor for three years and currently work as a Public Speaking Expert at PlanetSpark. I have taught students up to high school in CBSE, ICSE, and UP Board, covering all major subjects while guiding them through board exam projects and assignments with creativity, confidence, and a joyful learning spirit. My aim is to build confident speakers and motivated learners who grow with curiosity and joy.

Fair Points, Strong Arguments: Bias vs Objectivity for Class 7

This Grade 7 literature worksheet helps students understand the critical difference between biased and objective writing through the story of Aryan and Pooja, debate partners from a Mumbai school who must transform an emotion-led speech into a fair, evidence-based argument. Through five carefully designed exercises, students learn how bias narrows a perspective and how objectivity strengthens it, building skills essential for debate, critical writing, and analytical reading.

Why Bias vs Objectivity Matters in Literature?

The ability to evaluate claims fairly is one of the most important literacy skills a student can develop. For Grade 7 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Bias occurs when a writer selects only the information that supports a single viewpoint, ignoring contradictory evidence.
2. Objectivity requires examining evidence honestly and acknowledging complexity, even when it challenges personal opinion.
3. Balanced writing builds trust with readers and strengthens the credibility of an argument.
4. These concepts are foundational for debate, essay writing, journalism, and media literacy.

What's Inside This Worksheet?

This worksheet includes five exercises that build bias recognition and grammar skills together:

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students answer questions about Aryan and Pooja's debate journey, identifying what made the first draft biased and what made the final speech objective and effective.

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Students complete ten sentences using a word bank from the story, reinforcing vocabulary and understanding of key concepts.

Exercise 3 – True or False
Students read ten statements and decide whether each is true or false, testing factual recall and careful reading.

Exercise 4 – Underline and write the context
Students analyze sentence structure and meaning by identifying key components and placing them within a broader story or thematic context.


Exercise 5 – Paragraph Fill in the Blanks (Context Clues)
Students fill in blanks in a summary paragraph using context clues — without a word bank. This challenges inference and deeper comprehension.

Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. b) bias and emotional slogans.
2. a) clear evidence.
3. b) Want fair and convincing?
4. c) Selects supportive info only.
5. a) examine evidence honestly.
6. c) balance and accuracy.
7. a) including counterarguments.
8. a) It was balanced, supported.
9. b) Objectivity made it stronger.
10. c) Style and evidence fit.

Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. regulation
2. fact cards
3. selected
4. Coach Meera
5. objectivity / fair
6. rehearsals
7. fairness
8. scoreboard
9. audience / questions
10. questions / reasoning

Exercise 3 – True or False
1. True
2. False
3. True
4. True
5. False
6. False
7. True
8. False
9. True
10. False

Exercise 4 – Underline the key phrase and write the context
Answers will depend on personal perspective and may vary. (Hint:- Identify the "who, what, when, and where" of the scene.)

Exercise 5 – Paragraph Fill in the Blanks (Context Clues)
1. evidence
2. bias
3. fact cards / cards
4. rehearsals
5. convincing / credible
6. reasoning / argument
7. slogans / emotion

Help your child argue with fairness, think with evidence, and write with balance — start with a Free 1:1 Communication and Literature Trial Class at PlanetSpark.
Book a free trial!

Frequently Asked Questions

Bias involves personal preferences or prejudice, while objectivity involves presenting facts impartially.

Bias can distort characters' actions or events, influencing the reader’s judgment.

It helps them understand when a narrative is presenting an accurate or skewed perspective.