7th Grade Pronoun Agreement Worksheets | Grammar Test Prep | Light Up Literature

7th Grade Pronoun Agreement Worksheets | Grammar Test Prep | Light Up Literature

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7th Grade Pronoun Agreement Worksheets | Grammar Test Prep | Light Up Literature

7th Grade Pronoun Agreement Worksheets | Grammar Test Prep | Light Up Literature

$7.00
Sale price  $7.00 Regular price 
7th Grade Pronoun Agreement Worksheets | Grammar Practice & Test Prep
7th Grade ELA · Pronoun Agreement · Grammar Practice & Test Prep

Grammar Practice That
Students Actually Engage With

Five high-interest themed worksheets, five exit tickets, paragraph correction exercises, and complete answer keys — plus dedicated guides for both teachers and homeschool parents.

5 Themed Worksheets 5 Exit Tickets Paragraph Correction Exercises Teacher & Parent Guides Complete Answer Keys No Prep · Print Ready
Get This Resource
Aligned to L.7.1 · Three exercise formats · High-interest topics across all five worksheets

Pronoun Agreement Is a Small Error With a Big Impact on Writing Quality.

When a 7th grader writes "each student submitted their assignment" instead of "his or her assignment," it's not a careless mistake — it's a gap in understanding how pronouns must agree with their antecedents in number. That gap shows up in writing, on state assessments, and in every piece of formal communication they produce.

This resource addresses the gap directly with three distinct practice formats: choosing the correct pronoun in context, identifying and correcting errors in paragraphs, and quick-check exit tickets. Each format builds a different kind of skill — recognition, analysis, and application — working together to develop genuine mastery rather than rote memorization.

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Topics students actually care about

Bass fishing, football, social media, spring break — all five worksheets use high-interest themes so students focus their attention on the grammar, not on getting through boring content.

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Three exercise formats, one skill

Fill-in-the-blank pronoun selection, paragraph error identification and correction, and multiple-choice exit tickets. Each format builds comprehension differently — and together they prepare students for any assessment format.

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Built for home AND classroom

This is one of the few grammar resources with dedicated guides for both teachers and homeschool parents — written specifically for each audience, with implementation steps and tips that actually fit each context.

Complete answer keys — every item

Every fill-in sentence, every paragraph correction, and every exit ticket answer is included — with full corrected sentences for the paragraph exercises, not just letters. Grading is fast; feedback is specific.

High-Interest Topics. Consistent Skill Focus. Multiple Formats.

Each worksheet uses a different engaging theme, keeping practice fresh across multiple days or sessions. Worksheets 1–3 are pure pronoun selection practice. Worksheets 4 and 5 add paragraph correction, building toward the higher-order skill of finding and fixing errors in running text.

Bass Fishing

20 fill-in-the-blank sentences. Students choose the correct pronoun to complete each sentence — covering singular/plural agreement, indefinite pronoun antecedents, and compound antecedents.

Football

20 fill-in-the-blank sentences using football contexts — players, teams, coaches, referees. Same format as Worksheet 1, with new antecedent types and agreement challenges throughout.

Cool Careers

20 fill-in-the-blank sentences about trade careers, entrepreneurs, freelancers, and skilled workers. Includes tricky cases like collective nouns and compound subjects that often trip up 7th graders.

Famous Inventions

10 pronoun selection questions, then two paragraph correction sections (Safety Elevator + Windshield Wipers) with 5 embedded errors each. Students identify and rewrite the incorrect sentences.

Deer & Wildlife

10 pronoun selection questions about deer behavior and biology, then two paragraph correction sections (Behavior of Deer + Antlers and Growth) with 5 errors each to find and correct.

Quick Checks, Ready to Print — Three Per Page

Each exit ticket contains five multiple-choice pronoun agreement questions on a high-interest topic. All five are formatted to print three copies per page — so one print run gives you a full class set. Use one at the end of each practice session to check for understanding before moving on.

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Ides of March

5 questions · Julius Caesar & Roman history context

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Spring Break

5 questions · Travel & vacation context

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Summer Break

5 questions · Summer activities context

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YouTubers & Influencers

5 questions · Social media context

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Wild Animals

5 questions · Wildlife & nature context

Three Kinds of Practice. One Thorough Grammar Skill.

Pronoun-antecedent agreement involves multiple sub-skills — recognizing antecedents, applying singular/plural rules, and making judgment calls on tricky cases like indefinite pronouns and compound subjects. This resource works through all of them.

Skill Exercises What Students Practice
Singular vs. Plural Agreement All 5 worksheets · All 5 exit tickets Identifying whether the antecedent is singular or plural and selecting the matching pronoun (his or her / their / its / they)
Indefinite Pronoun Antecedents Worksheets 1–5 Applying rules for tricky antecedents like "everyone," "someone," "anyone," "each," "neither" — which require singular pronouns despite feeling plural
Compound Antecedents Worksheets 1–5 Determining pronoun agreement when two or more antecedents are joined by "and" (plural) or "or"/"nor" (match the closer antecedent)
Error Identification & Correction Worksheets 4–5 Reading paragraphs with embedded pronoun errors, identifying which sentences are incorrect, and rewriting them correctly — the highest-demand format in the resource
Test-Format Practice All 5 exit tickets Applying pronoun agreement knowledge in a multiple-choice format that mirrors how the skill appears on state assessments and standardized tests

One Resource. Two Complete Guides. No Adaptation Required.

Most grammar resources are written for one audience and require the other to improvise. This one includes a complete guide for each — written in the right language for each context, with steps that actually fit how each group teaches.

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Teacher's Classroom Guide

A full implementation plan with six steps and suggested timing for each phase of instruction.

Step 1: Introduce pronoun agreement (10–15 min) · Step 2: Guided practice with class (15 min) · Step 3: Independent practice (20–25 min) · Step 4: Discussion & error analysis (10–15 min) · Step 5: Optional application writing task · Step 6: Exit ticket assessment & review. Each step includes specific instructional suggestions, not just time estimates.
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Homeschool Parent's Guide

A seven-step at-home learning guide written specifically for parents — not just the classroom guide reworded.

Covers how to introduce the concept using real-world examples, how to work through questions together without just giving answers, how to make corrections a learning experience, and how to apply the skill in writing. Also includes tips for keeping lessons short and engaging, using visuals, and celebrating progress — plus a verbal quiz format for assessing understanding at home.

Grammar Practice Designed to Keep Attention, Not Lose It

Grammar drills are one of the highest-dropout activities for students who struggle with attention. This resource is designed to counteract that — through high-interest topics, varied formats, and short exit-ticket checkpoints that build momentum without overwhelming.

High-interest themes throughout

Football, fishing, social media, careers, wildlife — topics students already have opinions about make the grammar fade into the background. They focus on the sentences, not on finishing the page.

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Consistent format within worksheets

Worksheets 1–3 follow the exact same structure. Once a student knows what to do, they can move through the sentences without re-reading instructions at every question.

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Exit tickets are genuinely short

Five questions. That's it. Exit tickets provide a sense of completion without the cognitive fatigue of a full worksheet — ideal for students who struggle to sustain focus across longer tasks.

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Multiple sessions, not one marathon

Each worksheet is its own self-contained session. Teachers and parents can assign one at a time — spreading practice over five sessions — without any loss of coherence or continuity.

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Paragraph correction = active engagement

Finding hidden errors in a paragraph is a naturally engaging task — it's more like a puzzle than a drill. Worksheets 4 and 5 use this format to make the higher-demand work feel more approachable.

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Parent guide explicitly addresses focus

The homeschool guide includes "keep lessons short and engaging" and "make it fun" as explicit tips — not as afterthoughts. It's written with the reality of at-home attention challenges in mind.

7th Grade Grammar — Flexible Enough for Multiple Contexts

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7th Grade ELA Teachers

Use the teacher guide to implement as a 5-day grammar mini-unit, or pull individual worksheets for independent practice, grammar stations, or targeted reteaching.

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Homeschool Parents

The parent guide walks you through exactly how to introduce and practice the concept at home — no ELA background required. Complete answer keys make grading and feedback straightforward.

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Tutors & Interventionists

Start with one worksheet per session, use exit tickets as pre/post checks, and let the paragraph correction exercises reveal where the specific gaps are for each student.

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Substitute Teachers

Any of the three main worksheet formats works independently without teacher explanation. Students can read the instructions and begin — no setup or verbal walkthrough required.

Multiple Entry Points for the Same Resource

  • 📅5-day grammar mini-unit using one worksheet + one exit ticket per day
  • 🔔Bell ringer warm-up — 3–5 sentences from any worksheet to open class
  • 🚪Exit ticket to close a grammar lesson and check for understanding before homework
  • 🎯Test prep practice in the weeks before state ELA assessments
  • 📋Sub day — any worksheet is fully self-contained and student-directed
  • 🧩Grammar station in a literacy rotation — one worksheet per station visit
  • 🏠Homeschool grammar curriculum for 7th grade language arts
  • 🔄Intervention tool — use paragraph corrections to identify and address specific error patterns

What You're Getting

Grade Level 7th Grade (also appropriate for advanced 6th or struggling 8th)
Subject ELA — Grammar, Language Arts, Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Worksheets (5) Bass Fishing (20 sentences) · Football (20 sentences) · Cool Careers (20 sentences) · Famous Inventions (10 questions + 2 paragraph corrections) · Deer & Wildlife (10 questions + 2 paragraph corrections)
Exit Tickets (5) Ides of March · Spring Break · Summer Break · YouTubers & Influencers · Wild Animals — 5 multiple-choice questions each, printed 3-up per page for efficient printing
Exercise Formats Fill-in-the-blank pronoun selection (WS 1–5) · Paragraph error identification and sentence rewriting (WS 4–5) · Multiple-choice (exit tickets)
Teacher's Guide 6-step classroom implementation plan with suggested timing for introduction, guided practice, independent work, error analysis, optional writing application, and exit ticket assessment
Homeschool Parent's Guide 7-step at-home learning guide with additional tips for engagement, visuals, short sessions, and verbal assessment — written for parents, not adapted from the teacher guide
Answer Keys Complete answer keys for all 5 worksheets and all 5 exit tickets. Paragraph correction answers include full corrected sentences, not just error locations.
Standards L.7.1 — Demonstrate command of the conventions of standard English grammar; specifically L.7.1c (pronoun reference clarity) and pronoun-antecedent agreement
Format PDF — no prep, print ready
License Single classroom or personal homeschool use. Additional licenses required for teams, schools, or districts.

Before You Buy

Are the worksheets fill-in-the-blank or traditional multiple choice?
It depends on the worksheet. Worksheets 1, 2, and 3 are fill-in-the-blank — students read the sentence and write the correct pronoun in the blank. There's no A/B/C/D option list; they have to produce the answer. Worksheets 4 and 5 use the same fill-in format for the first 10 sentences, then switch to paragraph correction where students identify errors and rewrite sentences. The five exit tickets are traditional multiple choice with four labeled options — that's the format most similar to state assessments.
What does the answer key include for the paragraph corrections?
The paragraph correction answer key includes the fully corrected sentence for every item — not just an indication of what was wrong. For example, rather than "change 'their' to 'its'," the key gives you the complete rewritten sentence: "A deer must always be aware of its surroundings to avoid predators." This makes it easy to discuss specific corrections with students and useful for students who want to compare their rewritten sentence to a model answer.
Is this appropriate for homeschool use?
Yes — it was designed with homeschool parents explicitly in mind. The homeschool parent's guide is a separate document (not a reworded teacher guide) with 7 steps for introducing, practicing, and assessing the skill at home. It includes tips for making exercises fun, using real-world examples, keeping sessions short, and quizzing verbally after the worksheets. The complete answer keys with full corrected sentences mean no grammar background is needed to check student work accurately.
Can I use just a few of the worksheets, or do they need to be done in order?
Each worksheet is completely independent — there's no sequence that must be followed. Worksheets 1, 2, and 3 all practice the same skill with different topics, so any of them can stand alone. Worksheets 4 and 5 add paragraph correction, which is a higher-demand format, so some teachers prefer to assign 1–3 first for scaffolding before moving to 4–5. But there's no requirement — use whichever worksheets fit your timeline and student needs.
How long does each worksheet take to complete?
Worksheets 1–3 (20 fill-in sentences each) take most 7th graders about 15–20 minutes to complete independently. Worksheets 4 and 5 (10 sentences plus two paragraph corrections) typically take 25–35 minutes, since the paragraph correction format requires more reading and rewriting. Exit tickets take 5–10 minutes. The teacher guide suggests 20–25 minutes for independent practice, which aligns with the longer worksheets — shorter worksheets leave time for the guided introduction and exit ticket in a single class period.

Grammar Practice That
Doesn't Feel Like Punishment.

Five themed worksheets, five exit tickets, dedicated teacher and parent guides, and complete answer keys — everything needed to teach pronoun agreement the right way.

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PDF delivered instantly · Single-classroom license · Complete answer keys for all worksheets and exit tickets included

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