

This Grade 6 literature worksheet helps students understand the crucial difference between a story's topic — what it is about on the surface — and its theme — the deeper message it communicates about life. Through the story of Aaditya, a student from Pune who finds and returns a lost wallet at the metro station, students discover that while the topic might be "a lost wallet," the theme is far deeper: that small honest actions build trust between strangers. Five exercises develop comprehension, vocabulary, and grammar skills in a relatable, values-based context.
Understanding the difference between topic and theme is one of the most foundational skills in literary reading. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:
1. A topic names the surface subject of a text — what it is about in simple terms.
2. A theme expresses a larger truth or message about life, revealed through the events and characters of the story.
3. The same topic (e.g., friendship or competition) can carry many different themes depending on the writer's message.
4. Distinguishing between the two develops deeper comprehension, analytical writing, and critical thinking skills.
This worksheet includes five exercises that build theme-topic distinction skills and grammar awareness together:
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students answer questions about Aaditya's story, identifying the surface topic and the deeper theme, and understanding how the story's events communicate a larger message.
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Students complete ten sentences using a word bank from the story, reinforcing vocabulary and understanding of key narrative moments.
Exercise 3 – True or False
Students read ten statements and decide whether each is true or false, testing factual accuracy 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 deeper inference and comprehension.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. a) wallet.
2. a) honesty.
3. b) subject.
4. c) meaning.
5. b) trust.
6. a) medicine.
7. c) difference.
8. c) actions.
9. a) topic.
10. a) lessons.
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. station
2. speaker
3. wallet
4. honesty
5. security
6. stairs
7. reward
8. teacher
9. subject
10. meaning
Exercise 3 – True or False
1. False
2. True
3. False
4. False
5. True
6. False
7. True
8. True
9. False
10. True
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. wallet
2. theme
3. meaning / message
4. honesty
5. understanding / insight
6. deeper / hidden
7. story / text
8. meanings / themes
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Theme is the underlying message, while topic is the subject matter of the story.
It helps them go beyond the surface and explore the deeper meanings of a story.
By looking for recurring ideas and examining how the characters’ actions align with the theme.