

This Grade 7 literature worksheet helps students master the critical difference between tone (author’s attitude) and mood (reader’s feeling). Through diverse activities like multiple-choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, true/false statements, sentence analysis, and paragraph writing, learners move beyond basic comprehension to deeper literary analysis. By learning to distinguish between how an author feels and how a reader feels, students become more thoughtful, analytical readers—a skill essential for academic success in middle school and beyond.
For Grade 7 learners, distinguishing tone from mood is a gateway to advanced reading comprehension. This topic is important because:
1. Tone reveals the author’s perspective, while mood tracks the reader’s emotional journey.
2. The same text can have a serious tone but a hopeful mood—understanding this builds nuance.
3. Mastery of tone and mood improves performance in essay writing, book reports, and literary discussions.
4. It teaches students to read between the lines, a skill used in everything from novels to news articles.
This worksheet includes five carefully designed activities that build a lasting understanding of tone vs mood:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students select the correct answer from four options, covering basic definitions (e.g., “Tone is the author’s attitude toward the subject or audience”), common misconceptions, and how tone and mood are created through word choice, setting, and description.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Students complete key sentences using their understanding of core concepts, such as “The author controls tone, but the reader experiences mood” and “Mood reveals the feeling the reader experiences.”
✅ Exercise 3 – True and False
Students evaluate 10 statements to identify common myths (e.g., “Tone and mood mean exactly the same thing” is false) and reinforce correct knowledge about how tone and mood function in literature.
📖 Exercise 4 – Underline the Words
Students read 10 sentences—some with dialogue, some with descriptive narration—and underline the specific tone words (author’s attitude) and mood words (reader’s feeling) directly from each sentence, building close reading skills.
📝 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing (Fill in the Blanks)
Students complete a guided paragraph about tone and mood using a word bank (tone, attitude, mood, frightened, happy, hopeful, excited, tension, both, deeply). This reinforces vocabulary and demonstrates how tone and mood can work together or create intentional tension.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
1. b) Tone
2. c) Mood
3. c) details
4. b) atmospheric
5. a) mood
6. b) humorous
7. a) fearful 8. c) tone
9. a) playful
10. c) tone
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1.. author
2. words
3. attitude
4. feeling
5. Mood
6. description
7. humorous
8. serious
9. mood
10. Tone
Exercise 3 – True and False
1. False 2. True 3. False 4. True 5. True
6. False 7. True 8. False 9. True 10. True
Exercise 4 – Read each sentence and identify the tone and mood based on the words used in the sentence. Write down the tone and mood of each sentence.
1. "Congratulations! You won the grand prize!" shouted the excited announcer.
Tone: Excited
Mood: Joyful
2. The dark shadows crept across the dusty floor as the clock struck midnight.
Tone: Mysterious
Mood: Fearful
3. "I am so disappointed in your behaviour," the principal said with a heavy sigh.
Tone: Disappointed
Mood: Sad
4. Warm sunlight streamed through the window as birds sang their morning songs.
Tone: Warm
Mood: Peaceful
5. "Get out! Leave me alone! I never want to see you again!" she screamed.
Tone: Angry
Mood: Frustrated
6. The gentle rain pattered on the roof while she sipped tea by the fire.
Tone: Gentle
Mood: Calm
7. "We regret to inform you that your application has been denied," read the cold letter.
Tone: Formal
Mood: Rejected
8. Children laughed and ran through the sprinklers on the hot summer afternoon.
Tone: Fun
Mood: Happy
9. The soldier stood at attention with a tear rolling down his proud face.
Tone: Proud
Mood: Sad
10. "Maybe... maybe we can try again someday," he whispered with a faint smile.
Tone: Hopeful
Mood: Hopeful
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing (Fill in the Blanks)
When you read a story, you will notice two different feelings. The first is tone. This is the author's attitude toward the subject. You can hear it in the author's word choices. For example, words like "joyfully" or "bitterly" reveal the author's attitude. The second feeling is mood. This is what the reader feels while reading. The setting and description create the mood. A dark, stormy night creates a frightened mood. A bright, sunny beach creates a happy mood. The author's tone can be serious, but the reader's mood might still be hopeful. For example, a serious story about survival can make the reader feel excited. Tone and mood do not have to match. Sometimes authors create tension between them. Good readers pay attention to both tone and mood. They ask: How does the author feel? How do I feel? Understanding the difference helps you read more deeply.
Help your child move from basic reading to advanced literary analysis with a Free 1:1 Literature Skills Trial Class at PlanetSpark.
🔖Book a free trial!
Tone refers to the author’s attitude towards the subject, while mood is the feeling the reader gets from the text.
Recognizing tone and mood helps readers connect emotionally to the story and enhances the overall reading experience.
Yes, both tone and mood can shift throughout a story to reflect changes in plot, characters, or events.