

This Grade 6 worksheet helps students differentiate between objective and subjective writing. Using a real-life comparison between a weather report and a personal blog (as seen on page 3 of the worksheet :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}), learners explore how facts and opinions create very different meanings. Through structured exercises, students learn to identify measurable information and distinguish it from personal feelings and judgments.
Understanding this difference helps students become clear thinkers and effective communicators. For Grade 6 learners, this topic is important because:
1. It helps distinguish facts from opinions.
2. It improves critical reading and analysis.
3. It supports clear and accurate writing.
4. It builds awareness of bias and personal judgement.
This worksheet includes five structured activities to build understanding step-by-step:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students identify whether sentences are objective (fact-based) or subjective (opinion-based).
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Learners complete sentences using concepts related to facts, opinions, and writing style.
📋 Exercise 3 – True or False
Students analyse statements about objective and subjective writing.
📝 Exercise 4 – Identify Subjective Statements
Students underline opinion-based sentences, strengthening differentiation skills.
🎯 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Students explain how subjective sentences can be changed into objective ones using examples.
This worksheet ensures students move from recognising differences to applying them in writing.
Exercise 1 – MCQs
1. a) The temperature was 5°C
2. b) The morning was unpleasant
3. b) Visibility was reduced
4. a) It was unbearably cold
5. c) The wind speed was 20 km/h
6. b) The fog was terrible
7. c) The fog reduced visibility to 200 metres
8. a) The weather was lifeless
9. c) The temperature was recorded
10. b) The weather was terrible
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. opinions
2. facts
3. subjective
4. reliable
5. feelings
6. opinions
7. data
8. reader’s
9. accurate
10. adjectives
Exercise 3 – True/False
1. True
2. True
3. False
4. True
5. False
6. False
7. True
8. True
9. True
10. False
Exercise 4 – Underline the Subjective Statements
1. This was the worst cold morning
3. It was an extremely unpleasant day
4. The weather created a miserable experience
5. It felt unbearably freezing
7. The fog was terrible
10. The weather created a miserable experience
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Sample Answer:
A subjective sentence can be changed into an objective one by removing personal opinions and adding clear facts. In the passage, the sentence “it was the worst cold morning ever” is subjective because it shows personal feeling. It can be changed to “the temperature dropped to 5°C with strong winds,” which is factual. Similarly, instead of saying “the food was terrible,” we can say “the food was served cold,” making the statement clear and objective.
Help your child become a clear thinker and confident writer by mastering the difference between facts and opinions through expert-led learning.
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