Example Items. English IV

Similar documents
Shakespeare paper: Macbeth

Macbeth Act V. Act V, Scene i takes place late at night in Macbeth s castle.

Sample Macbeth essay on key scene turning point

I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616.

POEMS FROM DEAD POETS SOCIETY

AP Lit & Comp 1/28/15

SCENE II. Another part of the wood.

(The Light Princess( >.> 14 ~ This Is Very Kind of You. Created for Lit2Go on the web at fcit.usf.edu

Macbeth. [Aside] If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me, Without my stir. (1.3) What thou art promised: yet do I fear thy nature;

Literary Terms Imagery- Paradox- Foreshadowing- Aside- Soliloquy-

Exodus 7:14-10:29, Selected Verses

Continuum for Opinion/Argument Writing Sixth Grade Updated 10/4/12 Grade 5 (2 points)

William Wordsworth ( ) Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2017 INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY

Intertextuality and the context of reception: Intimations of immortality from recollections of early childhood - Stanzas 1-5 by William Wordsworth

THE PICTURE OF TWO BEASTS REVELATION 13:1-18

The Rogue and the Herdsman

Let Us Love and Sing and Wonder Text: John Newton, Music: Laura Taylor CCLI#

For each of the quotations below, consider the effects of language and structure:


Stratford School Academy Schemes of Work

MACBETH speech To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow, Creeps in this petty pace from day to day To the last syllable of recorded time, And all our

William Blake ( ) Excerpts from Songs of Innocence and of Experience. The Ecchoing Green (from Songs of Innocence)

Sermon Mark 7 Jesus and the Syrophoenician Woman Sermon Title: Unexpected Prophets July 29, 2018

1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual, and oral communications. (CA 2-3, 5)

Living Messages of the Books of The Bible GENESIS TO MALACHI

THE EXTRAORDINARY NAME OF JESUS

Lesson Plan 1: Annotation and AP Free-Response Writing Practice

Seventeenth Church of Christ, Scientist Chicago IL (USA) Wednesday, October 17, 2018 Subject: Cherishing Wholeness

St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church 403 W. Bridge St. Brownstown, Indiana. As We Prepare for Worship FOR FREEDOM

Do you think it s possible to truly know someone without interacting with them?

MEA #1 : Fold the fortune teller and complete two rounds with a partner to review Friday s lesson. Write your answers here.

Verses to Read Someone Notices! Under God's Eye Who Is Afraid?

The Ogre of Rashomon

StoryTown Reading/Language Arts Grade 3

Lesson 10 6 January, Paul s Deliverance from the Jews

A WORD OF WARNING CONCERNING THE TIME WE ARE IN

REMEMBERING THOSE WHO HAVE GIVEN THEIR LIVES FOR OTHERS

(Now the man Moses was very meek, above all the men which were upon the face of the earth.)

City Reformed PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

IS ANYBODY LOOKING FOR THE OLD PATHS

The Blue Mountains From the Yellow Fairy Book, Edited by Andrew Lang

Grade 7. correlated to the. Kentucky Middle School Core Content for Assessment, Reading and Writing Seventh Grade

Jonah THE BOOK OF JONAH JONAH. The Book of Jonah Jonah Son of Amattai A Bible for You to Study and Make Notes With. Jonah

IB ENGLISH SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS Ms. Malone

INSPIRED WORD September 13, 2017

12A. Introducing the Read-Aloud. What Have We Already Learned? Making Predictions About the Read-Aloud. Purpose for Listening.

WILLIAM BLAKE SONGBOOK

Lutheran Service Book (LSB) Hymn Suggestions Three Year Series Compiled by Henry Gerike

Poetry Assignment. Poetry Assignment. Year 8 English. 10/24/ Roydon Ng

I am Patrick, a sinner, most unlearned, t he least of all t he fait hful, and ut terly despised by many. Saint Patrick

FRONTISPIECE. See Page 11.

Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey, ON REVISITING THE BANKS OF THE WYE DURING A TOUR, July 13, 1798

Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes, Silver Level '2002 Correlated to: Oregon Language Arts Content Standards (Grade 8)

Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes, Bronze Level '2002 Correlated to: Oregon Language Arts Content Standards (Grade 7)

The Tell-Tale Heart. LEVEL NUMBER LANGUAGE Advanced C1_1037R_EN English

The Tragedy of Julius Caesar Casca complete text

OUTWARD RIGHTEOUSNESS IS NOT ENOUGH ISAIAH 58:1-14

Jonah Chapter 1 (Page 2703)

Questions: 1. Indicate what form of poetry is represented by this poem and explain briefly how you identified the form (2 points).

As a Mother Comforts Her Child Isaiah 66:10-14 (5/14/17)

One Woman's Kuchen Is Another's Strudel. Life is like bread dough. We can imagine the finished product but, even when we follow

Job Chapters 34 page 1 of 6 M.K. Scanlan. Job Chapter 34

PART 1 The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T. S. Eliot. PART 2 Two books from the GHS AP Independent Reading list

Acts Chapter 23. The council : The Sanhedrin (see notes on 4:15; Matt. 26:59).

Thursday, November 20 (B)

Immanuel Lutheran Church Love Live Give

Close Reading Activity Chap 2- Group 1 Of Mice and Men English 10 Block

Grade 6-8 LAT Teacher Handout

Edexcel IGCSE English Language A Paper 2 Time: 1 hour 30 minutes 4EA0/02 You do not need any other materials. Instructions black Fill in the boxes

Are You Going to Heaven?

Listening to the Still, Small Voice Wed. March 22, 2017 Hymns 410, 332, 237

Writing a literature essay

Correlation. Mirrors and Windows, Connecting with Literature, Level II

Chapter 18 My Testimony

B e s t B i b l e V e r s e s

Pray #2 Pray Honestly: The blessing from confessing sin 1John 1:5-2:

Bishop Eddie L. Long Senior Pastor

Coleridge s Frost at Midnight

Step 2: Read Selections from How to Read Literature Like a Professor

Courageous Conversations

I Am Angel. By Alaska Reece Vance. Performance Rights

South Carolina English Language Arts / Houghton Mifflin Reading 2005 Grade Three

Macbeth Summaries Act 5.notebook March 21, 2014

Wesley hymn. [Hymn 14.] Another.

VOCABULARY - Julius Caesar

The Lord empowers me to prosper! The Lord will show me good joy, peace, and safety! The Lord will protect me!

MIRANDA (speech 1) MIRANDA (speech 2)

BIBLICAL SOTERIOLOGY An Overview and Defense of the Reformed Doctrines of Salvation Limited Atonement, part 18. by Ra McLaughlin

A Scripture Song From the Book of Psalms Chapter 89:1

Chapter 1. 1 Now the word of the LORD came unto Jonah the son of Amittai, 2 Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and cry against it; for their

I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life. John 8:12

3. Answer these questions from slide 2 with a simple yes or no (do not worry about answering correctly right now!)

"'Mister,' he said. 'I want to buy one of your puppies.'

Children Sabbath School Lesson #238 for Song for opening the Sabbath School:

Psalm 103 (NLT), v.1-6

Frankenstein. by Mary SHELLEY retold by Patrick Nobes. `Captain! Something is moving on the ice. Look over there!'

Ezekiel Chapter 5. Ezekiel was a priest and was not generally to cut his hair, or his beard.

The Grammardog Guide to The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare

Roots of Reformed Worship

Transcription:

Example Items English IV English IV Example Items are a representative set of items for the P. Teachers may use this set of items along with the test blueprint as guides to prepare students for the P. On the last page, the correct answer, content SE and SE justification are listed for each item. The specific part of an SE that an Example Item measures is NOT necessarily the only part of the SE that is assessed on the P. None of these Example Items will appear on the P. Teachers may provide feedback regarding Example Items. (1) ownload the Example Feedback Form and email it. The form is located on the homepage of ssessment.dallasisd.org. OR (2) To submit directly, click Example Feedback after you login to the ssessment website. First Semester 2017 2018 ode #: 2121

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 Read the selection and choose the best answer for each question. dapted from ead Men s Path by hinua chebe 1 Michael Obi s ambitious hopes were fulfilled significantly earlier than he had originally expected. He was appointed headmaster of Ndume entral School in January, 1949. It, historically, had always been an incredibly unprogressive school in an incredibly unprogressive region, so the Mission authorities decided to designate a young and energetic man to administer it. Obi accepted this tremendous responsibility with enthusiasm; he had many wonderful ideas, and this was an exceptional opportunity to put them into practice. He had had sound secondary school education which designated him a pivotal teacher in the official records, and it differentiated him from the other headmasters in the mission field. In addition, he was outspoken in his condemnation of the narrow views of these older, and often less-educated, ones. 2 We shall make a wonderful job of it, shan t we, Nancy? he asked his young, beautiful wife. When they initially heard the joyful news of his impending promotion, she, despite her best efforts, felt a twinge of conflict. 3 We shall do our best, she replied, gleefully matching his buoyant exuberance. We shall have such beautiful gardens, and everything will be just modern and delightful In their two years of married life, she had, somewhat unknowingly, become entirely and completely infected by his passion for modern methods and his denigration 1 of these old and superannuated 2 people in the teaching field who would be better employed as traders in the Onitsha market. She began to see herself, already, as the admired wife of the young headmaster, the queen of the school. She would be the celebrated envy of the entire village, an objective that filled her with tremendous trepidation and exhilaration. 4 Even more so than expected, Ndume School was impossibly backward in every solitary sense of the word. In sheer determination to effect change, Mr. Obi put his entire life into the work, and his wife had put in hers, too. He had two fundamental aims: an impeccably high standard of teaching was insisted upon, and the school compound was to be turned into a place of extravagant beauty. efore long, Nancy s dream-gardens sprang to life with the coming of the rains; they blossomed in an impressive display of color and elegance. eautiful hibiscus and allamanda 3 hedges in brilliant red and yellow marked out the carefully tended school compound from the rank and neglected neighborhood bushes. 5 One evening, near the end of his first month at the school, as Obi was conceitedly admiring his work, he was scandalized and horribly offended to see an old woman from the village hobble right across the compound, through a marigold flower bed and the hedges. Upon further inspection, there he discovered faint, trace signs of an almost disused path, an unswerving beeline route running from the village across the school compound to the bush on the other side. 1 denigration: scorn; abuse 2 superannuated: outdated; obsolete 3 allamanda: a type of vine with numerous large flowers allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 6 It amazes me, said Obi, condescending to one of his teachers who had been three years in the school, that you people so willingly allowed the villagers to avail themselves of this footpath. He shook his head in disdainful condemnation, and he cast a disconcerting glare as he waited for a response. 7 The path, said the contrite teacher apologetically, appears to be incredibly important to them; although it is hardly used, it connects the village shrine with their place of burial. 8 nd what, exactly, has that got to do with the school? asked the exasperated headmaster. 9 Well, I don t know, replied the other with an unenthusiastic shrug of the shoulders. ut I most definitely remember there was a terrible row 4 some time ago when we attempted to barricade it. 10 That was some time ago, but it will not be used now, said Obi decisively as he anxiously paced the room. What will the Government Education Officer think of this when he comes to inspect the school next week? The villagers might, for all I know, decide to use the schoolroom for a pagan ritual during the inspection. Heavy sticks were planted closely across the path at the two places where it entered and left the school premises, and these were further strengthened with barbed wire. 11 Three days later, the village priest of ni called on the headmaster. highly-respected member of the community, he was an ancient man and walked with a pronounced stoop, and he carried a stout walking stick, which he usually tapped on the floor, by way of emphasis, each time he made a new point in his argument. 12 I have heard, he said solemnly after the usual exchange of formalities and cordialities, that our ancestral footpath has recently been closed 13 Yes, replied Mr. Obi. We cannot allow people to make a highway of our school compound. His obstinate tone and single-minded attitude did him no favors with the antiquated priest. 14 Look here, my son, said the priest combatively, bringing down his walking stick to underscore his perspective, this path existed before you were born and before your father was born. Our deceased relatives depart by it, and our ancestors visit us by it; but most important, it is the path of children coming in to be born 15 Mr. Obi listened with a satisfied smile on his face, and he only grew increasingly headstrong and unyielding in his response to what he perceived as feeble-minded superstitions. With an overwhelming sense of righteousness, Mr. Obi pressed back, hoping to settle the issue once and for all. 16 The whole purpose of our school, he said condescendingly, is to eradicate just such beliefs as that; dead men do not require footpaths. The whole idea is just fantastically impossible, and our duty is to teach your children to laugh at such preposterous ideas. 4 row: fight; quarrel allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 17 What you say may be true, replied the priest, but we follow the practices of our fathers. If you reopen the path, we shall have nothing to quarrel about. What I always say is: let the hawk perch, and let the eagle perch. He rose to leave, but Mr. Obi refused to accept the proposal out of hand without considering it for so much as a fraction of a second. 18 I am sorry, said the bullheaded young headmaster, but the school compound cannot be a thoroughfare; it is against our regulations. I would suggest your constructing another, alternate path, perhaps skirting our premises. We can even get our boys to assist in building it. I don t suppose the ancestors will find the minor detour too burdensome. 19 I have no more words to say, said the old priest already outside. 20 Two days later, a young woman in the village died in childbed. diviner 5 was immediately consulted, and he prescribed heavy sacrifices to propitiate 6 ancestors insulted by the fence. 21 Obi woke up the next morning to discover the ruins of his difficult work: the beautiful hedges were torn up not just near the path but right round the school; the flowers trampled to death; and one of the school buildings had been completely pulled down. 22 That day, the white Government Education Officer came to inspect the school, and he wrote a scathing, withering report both on the state of the premises and, more seriously, about the tribal-war situation developing between the school and the village, arising in substantial part from the misguided zeal of the new headmaster. 5 diviner: a prophet 6 propitiate: appease; pacify 1 In paragraph 3, the author uses the metaphor infected by his passion in order to illustrate how much Nancy loves her husband emphasize the force with which Mr. Obi runs the school show Mr. Obi s influence on his wife, Nancy highlight the differing opinions between Mr. Obi and Nancy 2 How does the priest s dialogue in paragraph 19 influence the story s plot? It builds suspense about the consequences of Mr. Obi s actions. It suggests that Mr. Obi will be resistant to changing his mind. It creates an optimistic tone suggesting that Mr. Obi will learn his lesson. It supports the idea that Mr. Obi is arrogant but sensitive to others beliefs. allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 3 Which word or phrase in paragraph 16 helps the reader determine the meaning of fantastically? purpose footpaths duty is to teach preposterous ideas 4 Which statement best illustrates the source of Mr. Obi s moral dilemma? The native beliefs and rituals should be respected. The natives traditional cultural beliefs must be eliminated. Old teaching practices must be maintained. Old teachers must be fired to allow progress. 5 The author likely wrote the story to help the reader learn that it is important to build stronger fences to keep out trespassers keep everything how it has been in the past listen to and have compassion for all people always be prepared for inspection by a supervisor allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 Read the selection and choose the best answer for each question. omposed upon Westminster ridge, Sept. 3, 1802 by William Wordsworth Earth has not anything to show more fair: ull would he be of soul who could pass by sight so touching in its majesty; This ity now doth, like a garment, wear 5 The beauty of the morning; silent, bare, Ships, towers, domes, theaters, and temples lie Open unto the fields, and to the sky; ll bright and glittering in the smokeless air. Never did sun more beautifully steep 10 In his first splendor, valley, rock, or hill; Ne er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep! The river glideth at his own sweet will: ear God! the very houses seem asleep; nd all that mighty heart is lying still! 6 In lines 4 and 5, the poet uses onomatopoeia to emphasize the sounds he hears analogy to illustrate the city s transformation foreshadowing to show how the bridge will come alive metaphor to highlight the beauty he sees 7 In the selection, the poet celebrates the bridge river Earth city allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 Use ead Men s Path and omposed upon Westminster ridge, Sept. 3, 1802 to answer the next question. 8 The contrasting underlying themes of ead Man s Path and omposed upon Westminster ridge, Sept. 3, 1802 are revealed by Mr. Obi suffering because he judges his environment harshly and the speaker of the poem feeling uplifted because he appreciates it the spiritual nature of both the short story and the poem the rural setting of the short story and urban setting of the poem Mr. Obi s conversation with the elderly village priest toward the end of short story and the speaker s prayer to God at the end of the poem allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 Read the selection and choose the best answer for each question. The passage is taken from Macbeth, ct V, scene v. unsinane. Within the castle. [Enter Macbeth, Seyton, and Soldiers, with drum and colors.] METH: Hang out our banners on the outward walls. The cry is still They come! Our castle s strength Will laugh a siege to scorn. Here let them lie Till famine and the ague 1 eat them up. 5 Were they not forced 2 with those that should be ours, We might have met them dareful 3, beard to beard, nd beat them backward home. [ cry within of women.] What is that noise? SEYTON: It is the cry of women, my good lord. [Exit.] 10 METH: I have almost forgot the taste of fears: The time has been, my senses would have cooled To hear a night-shriek; and my fell 4 of hair Would at a dismal treatise 5 rouse and stir s life were in t: I have supped full with horrors; 15 ireness, familiar to my slaughterous thoughts annot once start 6 me. [Enter Seyton.] Wherefore was that cry? SEYTON: The queen, my lord, is dead. METH: She should 7 have died hereafter; 20 There would have been a time for such a word. 8 To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow reeps in this petty pace from day to day To the last syllable of recorded time; nd all our yesterdays have lighted fools 1 ague: fever 2 forced: reinforced 3 dareful: boldly 4 fell: scalp 5 treatise: story 6 start: startle 7 should: inevitably would 8 word: message allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 25 The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle! Life s but a walking shadow, a poor player That struts and frets his hour upon the stage nd then is heard no more. It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury 30 Signifying nothing. [Enter a Messenger.] Thou com st to use thy tongue; thy story quickly! MESSENGER: Gracious my lord, I should report that which I say I saw, ut know not how to do t. 35 METH: Well, say, sir. MESSENGER: s I did stand my watch upon the hill, I looked toward irnam, and anon, methought, The wood began to move. METH: Liar and slave! 40 MESSENGER: Let me endure your wrath, if t be not so: Within this three mile may you see it coming; I say a moving grove. METH: If thou speak st false, Upon the next tree shalt thou hang alive, 45 Till famine cling 9 thee. If thy speech be sooth 10, I care not if thou dost for me as much. I pull in resolution, and begin To doubt the equivocation of the fiend That lies like truth: Fear not, till irnam wood 50 o come to unsinane : and now a wood omes toward unsinane! rm, arm, and out! If this which he avouches 11 does appear, There is nor flying hence nor tarrying here. I gin to be aweary of the sun, 55 nd wish th estate 12 o th world were now undone. Ring the alarum-bell! low wind, come, wrack! t least we'll die with harness 13 on our back. [Exit] 9 cling: wither 10 sooth: truth 11 avouches: asserts 12 estate: state, condition 13 harness: armor 9 In line 25, when Macbeth says Out, out brief candle one can tell from the context that the brief candle represents a fire he wants to control light of poor quality burning fear of death life that ended too soon allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV, Sem 1 Read the selection and choose the best answer for each question. Javier wrote the following paper to inform his readers about shark control. s you read Javier s paper, look for any changes he should make. Then answer the questions that follow. from Jacques ousteau s The Ocean World (1) Several marine laboratories are studying the shark-dolphin relationship with the hope of making the dolphin s behavior useful to man. (2) For example, experements with lemon sharks and bottlenosed dolphins show that, if given the choice, sharks will avoid dolphins. (3) Therefore, the researchers have been training certain species of dolphin to be used for shark control. (4) For instance, one dolphin has been taught to ward off sharks in captivity on a command from a sonic device. (5) The dolphin, on cue, will chase and hit the shark, driving it out of the area. (6) The scientists will soon conduct these experiments in the open sea, with the hope of employing dolphins to defend divers from sharks. (7) Someday, such trained dolphins may help deep sea divers by acting as watchdogs around undersea habitats. (8) They may police coastal beaches warding off sharks and protecting surfers, in addition. 10 What change, if any, should be made in sentence 2? Remove the comma after example hange experements to experiments Remove the comma after choice Make no change 11 What is the best way to rewrite sentence 8? In addition, they may police coastal beaches, warding off sharks and protecting surfers. They may police coastal beaches that are warding off sharks and protecting surfers in addition. In addition, they may police coastal beaches, or will be warding off sharks and protecting surfers. They may be policing coastal beaches because warding off sharks and protecting surfers in addition. allas IS - Example Items

EXMPLE ITEMS English IV Key, Sem 1 Item# Key SE Process Skills/SE Justification 1 12.7 2 12.5 3 12.1 4 12.5 nalyze how the author's patterns of imagery create meaning in metaphors nalyze how complex plot devices (e.g., suspense) advance the action in a work of fiction nalyze textual context to draw conclusions about the nuance in word meanings nalyze the moral dilemmas and quandaries presented in works of fiction 5 12.2 Relate the theme of a literary work 6 12.3 Evaluate figurative language in poetry 7 F19 Make complex inferences about text 8 12.2 ompare and contrast works of literature that express a universal theme 9 12.4 Evaluate elements of drama 10 12.13 Edit drafts for spelling 11 12.13 Revise drafts to clarify meaning