

This Grade 7 worksheet inspires students to think beyond conventional solutions through the science fiction story *The Orbital Anchor*. Set in the year 2090, the story follows Aryan, a young intern who uses imaginative thinking to solve a dangerous space debris problem — proving that creativity often beats brute force. Task types include multiple-choice questions (MCQs), fill-in-the-blanks, true/false statements, short answer questions, and a paragraph-writing activity explaining how imagination saved the station. The worksheet builds creative problem-solving skills, science vocabulary, and narrative comprehension — essential for imaginative and speculative fiction writing.
Imaginative thinking is the engine of storytelling. For Grade 7 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Creative writing requires generating original ideas, not just reporting facts.
2. Imaginative thinking helps students solve story problems (plot holes, character motivation, world-building).
3. Science fiction and fantasy genres rely on “what if” thinking — a skill this worksheet explicitly teaches.
4. Employers and higher education increasingly value creative problem-solving alongside technical knowledge.
This worksheet includes five engaging activities built around the story *The Orbital Anchor*:
🧠 Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)
Students answer 10 comprehension questions about the story, testing their understanding of setting, characters, inventions, conflicts, and the story’s central lesson.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Students complete 10 sentences by filling in missing keywords (e.g., harvesting, satellite, hull, percent, polymer, webs, traditionalist, flare, emergency, defense).
✅ Exercise 3 – True and False
Students read 10 statements and mark them as true or false, correcting common misconceptions about the story.
📝 Exercise 4 – Question and Answer
Students answer 10 short-answer questions that reinforce key plot points, scientific concepts, and the theme of imaginative thinking.
🎨 Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing
Students write a paragraph (80–100 words) explaining how Aryan’s imagination saved the station.
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)
1. b) Vikas-Station
2. b) Space debris
3. a) Aero-Gel Net
4. c) Dr. Sarita
5. b) Eighteen thousand miles per hour (Eighteen k)
6. a) A solar flare
7. b) Kinetic energy (absorbing it and safely slowing debris)
8. c) Polymer gel
9. c) Station vents
10. a) Smarter design
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. Vikas-Station is a massive solar-harvesting hub.
2. The orbit is filled with old satellite fragments.
3. Debris can punch through a hull like a bullet.
4. Magnetic shields drain forty percent of power.
5. Aryan developed an ultra-lightweight polymer gel.
6. The gel creates invisible webs to catch metal.
7. Dr. Sarita is a very traditionalist supervisor.
8. A solar flare disabled the station generators.
9. Aryan accessed the emergency vents to help out.
10. The gel acts as a smart defense for the station.
Exercise 3 – True and False
1. True
2. True
3. False (Magnetic shields drain forty percent of power — that’s a lot, not very little)
4. True
5. False (The polymer gel is ultra-lightweight, not heavy)
6. False (Dr. Sarita ordered him to delete the project; she did not like it)
7. True
8. True
9. False (Aryan did not ask for permission; he accessed the vents without asking)
10. False (The station remained untouched; the hull was not damaged)
Exercise 4 – Question and Answer
(Suggested answers based on the story)
1. What is the name of the orbital station?
Vikas-Station.
2. At what speed does the space debris move?
Eighteen thousand miles per hour.
3. Why are the magnetic shields problematic?
They drain forty percent of the harvested solar power.
4. What material did Aryan use for the net?
A non-magnetic, ultra-lightweight polymer gel.
5. How does the gel stop the metal fragments?
It catches the fragments, absorbs their kinetic energy, and safely slows them down.
6. What did Dr. Sarita call the gel project?
"Expensive slime" (or similar — she said it was just expensive slime).
7. What event caused the magnets to fail?
A sudden solar flare disabled the station's primary magnetic generators.
8. Where did the micro-debris cloud come from?
A weather satellite.
9. How was the debris seen stopping in space?
On infrared sensors, thousands of tiny white dots hit the gel and stopped instantly.
10. What was the final lesson of the story?
Complex problems don't always need more power — they just need a smarter design / imaginative thinking.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing (Sample Answer – 92 words)
Aryan’s imagination saved Vikas-Station when the magnetic shields failed after a solar flare. While his supervisor dismissed his Aero-Gel Net as “expensive slime,” Aryan believed in his idea. When a cloud of micro-debris from a weather satellite headed straight for the station, Aryan acted without permission. He pumped his ultra-lightweight polymer gel through the emergency vents into the debris path. The gel created invisible webs that caught the speeding fragments, absorbing their kinetic energy. On infrared sensors, the debris stopped instantly. The station remained untouched. Aryan proved that creative thinking — not just more power — can solve the hardest problems.
Help your child unlock the power of imaginative thinking with a Free 1:1 Creative Writing Trial Class at PlanetSpark.
It is writing that comes entirely from a student’s own ideas, such as fantasy stories, alternate endings, or new characters, without relying on real events or prompts that give details.
It provides scaffolds like “character, setting, problem, solution” boxes and asks them to invent each part, then add dialogue, internal thoughts, and figurative language like metaphors.
Imaginative writing applies grammar naturally—students must use correct tenses, punctuation in dialogue, and varied sentence structures while focusing on creativity, which improves retention.