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Grade 6 English
Chapters

1Main Idea and Summarizing Skills

2Theme and Message in Literature

3Author’s Purpose, Tone, and Formality

4Point of View and Perspective

5Text Structure in Informational Texts

6Literary Devices and Figurative Language

7Analyzing Short Stories

8Analyzing Informational Texts and Arguments

9Comparing Texts and Visual Elements

10Organizing Writing and Using Transitions

11Developing Arguments and Supporting Claims

12Creative Writing Techniques

13Editing, Revising, and Correcting Errors

Commonly Confused Words: Their vs There vs They’reChoosing Correct Frequently Confused WordsCorrecting Errors with Apostrophes and PossessivesFixing Comma Errors in Complex SentencesSpotting and Correcting Capitalization MistakesUsing Peer Feedback to Revise WritingSuggesting Stronger Word ChoicesEditing for Clarity and ConcisionFinal Check: A Self-Editing ChecklistPractice: Edit a Paragraph for Multiple Errors

14Research Skills and Responsible Use

15Vocabulary Building: Affixes, Roots, and Context

Courses/Grade 6 English /Editing, Revising, and Correcting Errors

Editing, Revising, and Correcting Errors

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Develop proofreading and revision habits: fix frequently confused words, punctuation and capitalization errors, and make effective revision suggestions.

Content

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Commonly Confused Words: Their vs There vs They’re

Their vs There vs They're Explained for Grade 6 Students
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Their vs There vs They're Explained for Grade 6 Students

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Their vs There vs They're — Clear, Funny, and Totally Fixable

"One small apostrophe can save your character from being misunderstood — and your grade from dropping one full letter."

You’ve been learning creative writing techniques: personification, sensory details, tight openings and endings, and using structure to control pacing. Great! Now imagine you’ve written a tiny, perfect flash fiction piece — full of atmosphere and tension — and someone stops reading because a single word stumbles them out of the story. Harsh, but true. That’s where their vs there vs they're swoops in like a grammar superhero (cape optional).


Why this matters (and why it ties to creative writing)

  • Clarity keeps the reader immersed. When a confused word appears, readers pause to figure it out. That pause breaks flow — the pacing technique you practiced.
  • Voice and credibility. Using the right words makes your narrator sound smart (or at least competent). In creative writing, small errors can make an otherwise striking piece feel sloppy.
  • Editing & Revising are skills. Just like choosing the best verb or trimming a line break, choosing the correct homophone is part of polishing your writing.

Quick definitions — know your weapons

  • Their (possessive adjective)

    • Shows possession. It means "belonging to them." Use it before a noun.
    • Example: Their lantern lit the cave.
  • There (adverb / pronoun)

    • Shows place or existence. It can point to a location ("over there") or introduce a fact ("There are three apples").
    • Example: There is a strange sound outside.
  • They’re (contraction)

    • Short for "they are." Use it when you can expand it to "they are." Remember the apostrophe — it’s doing the work of missing letters.
    • Example: They’re whispering in the hallway.

Micro explanation: the apostrophe is a clue

If you can replace the word with "they are," and the sentence still makes sense, choose they’re. If the sentence shows ownership, choose their. If you’re pointing to a place or introducing existence, choose there.


Memory tricks that actually work

  • Their → Their has the word "heir" inside it. Think of heirs as people owning things. So their = ownership.
  • There → There has "here" in it. Both point to places. Think there = place.
  • They’re → If you can say "they are," use they’re. If you hear "they are," you know the apostrophe belongs.

Quick test: Replace with "they are." If it fits, use they're. If it doesn’t, pick their (possession) or there (place/existence).


Real writing examples (with creative-writing flair)

  1. Wrong: Their going to the lake at dawn.

    • Fix: They’re going to the lake at dawn.
    • Why: Replace with "they are going" — it fits.
  2. Wrong: There dog left muddy pawprints on the rug.

    • Fix: Their dog left muddy pawprints on the rug.
    • Why: The dog belongs to them — possession.
  3. Wrong: Their is a whisper coming from the old piano.

    • Fix: There is a whisper coming from the old piano.
    • Why: The sentence announces the existence of a whisper.
  4. Story-y example:

They’re hiding behind the curtain, and their giggles echo in the hall. Over there, on the windowsill, a moth taps the glass.

See how each word does different work? The first is "they are," the second shows possession, the third points to a place.


Editing checklist for Grade 6 writers (use while revising)

  1. Read aloud slowly. If you stumble on a word, mark it. Often the ear catches wrong homophones.
  2. For every their/there/they're in your piece, ask:
    • Can I expand it to "they are"? → If yes, it should be they’re.
    • Is it showing who owns something? → If yes, use their.
    • Is it pointing to a place or saying something exists? → If yes, use there.
  3. Swap the word with another (they are / the dog belongs to them / over here). If meaning changes, you had the wrong word.
  4. Use peer review: have a classmate read your flash fiction. If they stumble, fix it — they read like a real audience.

Mini-practice: Spot and fix (quick quiz)

Correct the sentences below. Answers are under the next heading — try first, then check.

  1. Their is a shadow in the doorway.
  2. I think theyre going to be late.
  3. The kids left their coats on the bench over there.
  4. Theyre dog chased a squirrel into the yard.
  5. There toys are scattered across the floor.

Answers and explanations

  1. There is a shadow in the doorway. — announcing existence/place.
  2. They’re going to be late. — contraction for "they are." (Also, notice the missing apostrophe in the quiz: that was deliberate to test your eye.)
  3. Correct as written: The kids left their coats on the bench over there. — "their" = possession; "over there" = place.
  4. Their dog chased a squirrel into the yard. — owner of the dog.
  5. Their toys are scattered across the floor. — possession.

Tiny revision exercise (use with your flash fiction or poem)

Take one piece you wrote previously (a flash fiction or a short poem). Search for all instances of their/there/they're. For each one, write a one-line reason (in the margin) why that word is correct. If you can’t write a reason, you probably picked the wrong word — fix it.

This practice combines revision techniques (from earlier lessons on structure and pacing) with micro-editing skills. It’s how readers stop tripping and keep feeling the story.


Key takeaways

  • Their = possession. The thing belongs to them.
  • There = place or existence. Points to location or starts a sentence like "There is..."
  • They’re = they are. Use the apostrophe for the missing letter.

Final thought: mastering these tiny words is like removing pebbles from the path of a runner — your reader can sprint through your story without stumbling. Keep practicing in your edits, and your voice will shine through clean, confident sentences.

"Good writing is mostly rewriting — and fixing the right/there/their is part of the craft."

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