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    Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Bias in Text

    Class 6EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
    Sejal Jain
    Sejal JainVisit Profile
    An English educator with 10+ years of experience, I hold a Master’s in English Literature and a TESOL certification. My diverse professional background allows me to bring fresh perspective, strong communication, and thoughtful intention to every aspect of my work in education.
    Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Bias in Text
    Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Bias in Text

    Class 6 Grammar Worksheet on Bias in Text

    Class 6EnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
    Sejal Jain
    Sejal JainVisit Profile
    An English educator with 10+ years of experience, I hold a Master’s in English Literature and a TESOL certification. My diverse professional background allows me to bring fresh perspective, strong communication, and thoughtful intention to every aspect of my work in education.

    Think Before You Believe: Understanding Bias in Text for Class 6  

    This Grade 6 worksheet helps students recognise and analyse bias in written texts. Using a real-life scenario about a sports club review (as seen on page 3 of the worksheet :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}), learners explore how opinions, selective information, and missing details can influence readers. Through structured exercises, students develop critical reading skills and learn to distinguish between facts and biased viewpoints.

    Why Bias in Text Matters in Grammar?  

    Understanding bias helps students become careful and thoughtful readers. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:  
    1. It teaches how opinions can influence writing.  
    2. It helps identify one-sided information.  
    3. It builds critical thinking and analysis skills.  
    4. It encourages balanced and fair writing.  

    What’s Inside This Worksheet?  

    This worksheet includes five engaging activities that build understanding step-by-step:

    🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions  
    Students identify biased statements, factual information, and missing details in a passage.

    ✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks  
    Learners complete sentences using key concepts related to bias and balanced writing.

    📋 Exercise 3 – True or False  
    Students evaluate statements about bias, opinion, and factual writing.

    📝 Exercise 4 – Identify Biased Language  
    Students underline opinionated or biased phrases, helping distinguish facts from opinions.

    🎯 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing  
    Students explain how bias appears in a passage and why it is important to identify it.

    This worksheet ensures students move from recognising bias to analysing its impact.

    ✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)

    Exercise 1 – MCQs  
    1. b) Most amazing club ever  
    2. c) Biased opinion  
    3. c) It hides important information  
    4. b) trained coaches  
    5. a) Only positive points  
    6. c) clearly the best choice  
    7. b) Negative points  
    8. a) It shows one-sided view  
    9. c) The club has trained coaches  
    10. a) Misleads readers  

    Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks  
    1. opinion  
    2. side  
    3. bias  
    4. opinion  
    5. neutral  
    6. biased  
    7. both  
    8. balanced  
    9. details  
    10. balance  

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

    Exercise 4 – Underline the Biased Phrases  
    1. the best park in the city  
    2. —  
    3. clearly the smartest student  
    4. —  
    5. absolutely perfect  
    6. —  
    7. the most talented player ever  
    8. —  
    9. clearly superior to all others  
    10. —  

    Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing  
    Sample Answer:  
    Bias appears in the passage when the writer only shares positive opinions about the sports club and ignores important details like high membership costs. For example, calling it “the most amazing sports club ever” shows a strong personal opinion. Similarly, if someone says “this is the best school in the city” without comparing facts, it is biased. Identifying bias helps readers think critically and understand whether the information is fair and complete.

    Help your child become a critical reader who can identify bias and think independently with expert-guided learning sessions.  

    🔖Book a free trial!

    Frequently Asked Questions

    They teach learners to identify opinions versus facts, improving reasoning in CBSE English reading comprehension worksheet activities.

    It helps students evaluate information critically and avoid misunderstanding messages in English for early learners comprehension tasks.

    By questioning language and checking for opinions, they improve accuracy in reading comprehension worksheets and analysis skills.

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