English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B PDF

Summary

This document is a past paper, English II Summative Assessment for units 2A & 2B. It comprises multiple-choice questions based on STAAR passages, focusing on English language and literature skills. The exam covers Spring 2023 and 2024 material. It emphasizes different types of questions found in English II assessments.

Full Transcript

English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Testing Guidance Page The test on the following pages is composed of three STAAR passages from the Spring 2023 administration. (Informational, Poetry, Revising). It is supplemented...

English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Testing Guidance Page The test on the following pages is composed of three STAAR passages from the Spring 2023 administration. (Informational, Poetry, Revising). It is supplemented with an Editing passage from the 2024 Spring administration. It is meant to measure student mastery of the skills in unit 2A & 2B. As these assessments come from released STAAR passages, DO NOT direct your students to use the STAAR practice tests through the SSO. The state has released part of the test into that portal and using them as practice with your students will invalidate your ability to use them in a summative assessment. All released passages on the Spring 2023 exam will be used between the Q1, Q2, and Q3 summative assessments. (It’s the most authentic questions we have, so let’s use them to measure learning!) Best practice is for you to take the test either by yourself or with your PLC. Doing so will not only help familiarize yourself with what you need to plan for your students, but it will also help you to feel more confident spending time in the most recently released test. Pages 22-23 provide the Key, TEKS, the state correct percentage, as well as a list of tested skills. It also includes a Short Constructed Response grading guidance page to help when you have to score students' responses. This test will be available in eduphoria. We expect that you will need to curve this test before entering it into the gradebook. For Spring 2023 the approaches cut scores on the STAAR/EOC test for English I were as follows: ○ Low approaches - 42%, high approaches - 48%, meets - 56%, masters - 88% ○ Work with your team to decide an appropriate amount to curve the test, or use the grading guidelines below. As always, follow campus grading procedures as well as ARD, 504, and language accommodations. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B We suggest that your team sets the “meets” threshold as passing in the gradebook, using the following grading scale based on raw score: 1 = 45% 5 = 52% 9 = 60& 13 = 73% 17 = 85% Low approaches 2 = 47% 6 = 54% 10 = 65% 14 = 76% 18 = 90% High approaches Masters 3 = 49% 7 = 56% 11 = 68% 15 = 79% 19 = 95% 4 = 50% 8 = 58% 12 = 70% 16 = 82% 20 = 100% Meets Please let me know if you see any errors on the test! - Alison English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Read the next two selections and answer the questions that follow. Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea 1 Out on the end of a jetty in San Francisco Bay, there is a strange and beautiful stone structure called the Wave Organ. It was cobbled together in the late twentieth century with recycled marble and granite from old discarded monuments, secondhand curbstones, PVC pipes, and rocks. Yet this carefully concealed marvel has the look and feel of an ancient ruin. 2 Walking along the jetty, you will not see this secret—yet public—place until you reach the stone steps that take you down into it. Descend those steps and you will find yourself among children climbing on the stonework, anglers casting their fishing lines off the terraces, and daydreamers quietly contemplating the sights and sounds of the bay. 3 “It’s very romantic,” says Peter Richards, the artist who first envisioned this spot back in 1980. “You’re out in the middle of the bay, but you’re not really on dry land, so it’s sort of a tenuous place. So that’s what makes it interesting to me. The edge between solid ground, or solid land, and the water. And I think edges are where interesting things happen.” 4 Even when you’re standing on it, you may not realize that you’re atop a gigantic musical instrument, or, more accurately, a “wave-activated acoustic sculpture.” The Inspiration for the Wave Organ 5 Richards first got the idea for the Wave Organ from listening to a recording by composer Bill Fontana called “Kirribilli Wharf.” Fontana’s experimental work is called “sound art,” and it boldly defies the conventions of ordinary music. 6 Fontana recorded “Kirribilli Wharf” in Australia in 1976. Years later, he recalled how he did it. “In the middle of the night, I went with an outside broadcast van to a floating concrete pier in Sydney Harbor that had vertical cylindrical holes going from the deck to the underside.” He placed microphones at the top end of eight vertical steel pipes. On the English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B resulting recording, the listener hears waves beneath the pier gently lapping against the bottom ends of the pipes. This creates “changing percussive rhythms” that sound a bit like a hand tapping an African drum. 7 Fontana has since singled out “Kirribilli Wharf” as a turning point in his work. It demonstrates what he calls “the inherent musicality of sound in the environment.” “Kirribilli Wharf” created an artistic turning point for Richards as well. The soothing pulse and the gentle wash of waves he heard on Fontana’s recording showed him how he could incorporate sound from the natural environment into his own work. 8 Conceptually, Richards’s Wave Organ and Fontana’s “Kirribilli Wharf” occupy a similar artistic edge. They both straddle that divide between natural occurrence and human creativity. “Sound Sculpture” vs. “Acoustic Sculpture” 9 Fontana calls his compositions “sound sculptures,” and Richards calls the Wave Organ an “acoustic sculpture.” Although those phrases seem similar, they have meanings that are quite different. 10 Fontana creates “sound sculptures” by shaping existing sounds from the environment, the way a sculptor shapes clay. These “sculptures,” however, are not physical objects. They are audio recordings you can listen to on a record or on a streaming service. 11 Richards, on the other hand, is an environmental sculptor. Although recordings of the sounds of the Wave Organ are available online, the Wave Organ is much more than just a series of sounds. It is a physical place. To enjoy it fully, you must go there and experience it with all your senses. 12 As a composer, Fontana creates his sound sculptures by recording and manipulating the “coherent sound patterns” that he finds in an already existing environment. The environment may be a natural one, a human one, or, as is the case with “Kirribilli Wharf,” one where natural and human landscapes collide. Obviously, whoever built that floating pier in Sydney Harbor did not include the vertical steel pipes in it in order to produce musical sounds. The sounds, in fact, were barely audible before Fontana miked them. Yet Fontana did not make those sounds. Nor did he alter the landscape in any way to get them. The production of those sounds was purely an accident. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 13 As an environmental sculptor, Richards basically does the opposite of Fontana. He intentionally alters the physical landscape to produce an artistic effect. After hearing the accidental sounds of waves striking the pipes on an ordinary pier on Fontana’s recording, Richards realized he could use pipes and the waves of the San Francisco Bay to build a sculpture that creates extraordinary musical sounds on purpose. 14 Consequently, the Wave Organ is itself a work of art. The same, of course, cannot be said of the floating concrete pier in Sydney Harbor. Music of the Sea 15 With a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and the assistance of master stonemason George Gonzalez, Richards completed the Wave Organ in 1986. As the tide changes, the auditory results are spectacular. 16 The steel pipes in the floating pier that Fontana recorded were all vertical, narrow, and the same length. Consequently, they all emitted a uniform sound. When building the Wave Organ, Richards and Gonzalez intentionally did the reverse. They used wide, plastic PVC pipes of different lengths and laid them horizontally beneath the Wave Organ’s walkways, benches, and steps at various heights above the water at low tide. 17 The rise and fall of the tide create vibrations in different pipes at different times. When a wave hits the end of a pipe, it creates a percussive sound that comes out the other end. When water flows within the horizontal pipes, it creates whooshing sounds. Shorter pipes create higher pitched sounds. Longer pipes create lower ones. “It’s like listening to the world’s largest seashell,” one visitor said. “It’s like distant drums, muffled cymbals, quiet thunder. The variety is endless.” 18 Like “Kirribilli Wharf,” the Wave Organ finds its beauty in its interaction with the environment. Both works bridge the gap between art and nature by amplifying the rhythm of the waves to divulge the music of the sea. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Leaping Falls by Galway Kinnell And so it was I sheered, Eccentric, into outer space, And tracked with lost paces The forgotten journey of a child, 5 Across the creaking snow, Up the deer-trail, Over the snowdrifted hill Into the secret country Where a boy once found, 10 Routing from ledge to ledge In a tumult at sunrise, The cascading of Leaping Falls. Now the falls lay draped Without motion or sound, 15 Icicles fastened in stories To stillness and rock. At the bottom, A heap of broken icicles Lay dead blue on the snow. Cold was through and through, 20 Noiseless. Nothing But clouds at my nostrils Moved. Then I uttered a word, Simply a bleak word Slid from my lips. Whereupon 25 A topmost icicle came loose And fell, and struck another With a bell-like sound, and Another, and the falls Leapt at their ledges, ringing 30 Down the rocks and on each other Like an outbreak of bells That rings and ceases. The silence turned around And became silence again. 35 Under the falls on the snow A twigfire of icicles burned pale blue. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 1. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” to answer the following question. Read the dictionary entry. amplify \ˈam-plə-ˌfī\ v 1. to expand by closer analysis 2. to increase in amount, importance, or intensity 3. to make complete 4. to cause genetic material to undergo massive replication Which definition matches the meaning of amplifying in paragraph 18 of the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea”? a. Definition 1 b. Definition 2 c. Definition 3 d. Definition 4 2. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” to answer the following question. How is the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” organized to develop the thesis? a. The development and history of the Wave Organ and “Kirribilli Wharf” are compared in order to distinguish them and illustrate the influence one had on the other. b. The biographies of Richards and Fontana are contrasted in order to examine how the life experience of each helped shape their artistic creations. c. A chronological history of the Wave Organ’s development is provided to show how difficult it was to create. d. An advantages-and-disadvantages approach is used to weigh the value of one form of sound art against the other. 3. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” to answer the following question. What is the most likely reason the author includes the photograph before paragraph 5 in the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea”? a. To illustrate the difference between the Wave Organ and “Kirribilli Wharf” English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B b. To demonstrate the method by which the Wave Organ produces sound c. To help the reader visualize the sculpture described d. To show the reader a familiar work of art 4. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” to answer the following question. Which detail from paragraph 13 of the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” best supports the key idea that the Wave Organ is a work of art? a. Richards listened to Fontana’s recording before he built the Wave Organ. b. The Wave Organ was constructed with pipes. c. Richards built the Wave Organ on San Francisco Bay. d. The Wave Organ was deliberately designed to create an interesting effect. 5. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” to answer the following question. What is the most likely reason the author of the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” uses a comparison organizational structure in the section “ ‘Sound Sculpture’ vs. ‘Acoustic Sculpture’ ”? a. To suggest that Fontana’s work is more important than Richard’s work. b. To illuminate the difference between Fontana’s work and Richard’s work. c. To reveal Fontana’s original project that inspired Richard’s work. d. To emphasize the originality of Fontana’s work when compared to Richard’s work. 6. Use “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. This question has two parts. Part A In the poem “Leaping Falls,” the speaker is most likely — a. a boy exploring a new environment b. an adult returning to a place he visited in his youth c. a pioneer discovering an unknown land d. a hunter pursuing an animal through the wilderness English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Part B Which quotation from the poem best supports the answer to Part A? a. Eccentric, into outer space, (line 2) b. The forgotten journey of a child, (line 4) c. Up the deer-trail, (line 6) d. Without motion or sound, (line 14) 7. Use “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. What does the break between stanza 4 (lines 19–24) and stanza 5 (lines 25–30) of the poem “Leaping Falls” convey to the reader? a. A sense of suspense as the reader anticipates the effect of the spoken word b. A sense of doubt as the reader considers whether the waterfall could be affected by the spoken word c. A feeling of uncertainty that the speaker is telling a true story d. A feeling of sympathy for the strong emotions the speaker reveals 8. Use “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. The poet’s use of imagery in lines 35 and 36 contributes to the poem “Leaping Falls” by creating a tone of — a. wonder and awe b. hopelessness and despair c. courage and determination d. anger and resentment 9. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. Which statement would the speaker of the poem “Leaping Falls” most likely agree with that is NOT supported by the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea”? a. Artistic experiences can be found in natural environments. b. Encountering wonders in nature is a private and individual experience. c. It takes hard work and dedication to complete an artistic project. d. It is the responsibility of the individual to share insight about the natural world. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 10. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. Which statements express themes found in BOTH the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and the poem “Leaping Falls”? Select TWO correct answers. a. Sounds from the natural world can take on a musical quality. b. Sculpture is an effective art form for expressing deep emotions. c. People’s perceptions of nature can bring out its hidden artistic qualities. d. People need to be careful about how they treat natural resources. e. Winter is a harsh season necessary for preserving natural balance. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 11. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. Read these quotations from the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and the poem “Leaping Falls.” Fontana recorded “Kirribilli Wharf” in Australia in 1976. Years later, he recalled how he did it. “In the middle of the night, I went with an outside broadcast van to a floating concrete pier in Sydney Harbor that had vertical cylindrical holes going from the deck to the underside.” He placed microphones at the top end of eight vertical steel pipes. On the resulting recording, the listener hears waves beneath the pier gently lapping against the bottom ends of the pipes. This creates “changing percussive rhythms” that sound a bit like a hand tapping an African drum. (paragraph 6 of “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea”) A topmost icicle came loose And fell, and struck another With a bell-like sound, and Another, and the falls Leapt at their ledges, ringing Down the rocks and on each other Like an outbreak of bells That rings and ceases. (lines 25–32 of “Leaping Falls”) How does the description of the natural sound in the paragraph from the article DIFFER from the description of the natural sound in the lines from the poem? a. The paragraph from the article describes how a natural sound was recorded, while the lines from the poem recreate a natural sound with rhythm. b. The paragraph from the article compares the natural sound to a musical instrument, while the lines from the poem compare the natural sound to speech. c. The paragraph from the article describes the silence before a sound was created, while the lines from the poem describe the continuous sounds created by the environment. d. The paragraph from the article emphasizes the clamorous energy of the sound, while the lines from the poem convey the passive gentleness of the sound. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 12. Use “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and “Leaping Falls” to answer the following question. The author of the article “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” and the poet of “Leaping Falls” would BOTH most likely agree that — a. artificial structures do not belong in a natural environment b. there is a limit in the natural world to inspire artistic creation c. people are doing an admirable job of protecting nature d. people often seek meaningful experiences in nature English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Read the selection and choose the best answer to each question. Raul has written this essay about one of his favorite destinations in Texas. Read Raul’s essay and look for any revisions he needs to make. When you finish reading, answer the questions that follow. Big Bend National Park (1) There’s an expression that “everything’s bigger in Texas,” and visitors to Big Bend National Park will agree. (2) This great park is located around the “Big Bend” of the Rio Grande River, running along more than 100 miles of the U.S.–Mexico border. (3) At 1,252 square miles, it’s bigger than the state of Rhode Island. (4) It’s not just the size of Big Bend that attracts tourists. (5) There are many choices of activities for visitors at Big Bend. (6) Visitors to Big Bend can see 1,200 different species of plants and 550 species of birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians. (7) In addition, there are 40 species of fish that swim in the Rio Grande River. 8 Big Bend is in fact home to a greater variety of animal species than any other national park in the United States. (9) Many endangered species live there, including the peregrine falcon, black-capped vireo, and Mexican long-nosed bat. (10) Some animals, like the Carmen Mountain white-tail deer and Colima warbler, do not live anywhere else in the U.S. (11) Looking for the Chisos agave plant? (12) You won’t find it anywhere outside this Texas wilderness. (13) Diverse wildlife thrive in Big Bend. (14) People will also find a range of activities to enjoy at the park. (15) There are over 150 miles of trails for hikers to explore. (16) On the Chisos Basin Loop Trail, hikers can walk under the shade of Mexican pine, oak, and juniper trees. (17) Along the way, they might see the tracks of bears and mountain lions or the colorful flash of a hummingbird. (18) Experienced hikers can take the 10.5‑mile round-trip hike to the 7,382‑foot summit of Emory Peak. (19) At the peak, there is a 360‑degree panoramic view of the park. (20) Scenic trails wind through the desert and along the Rio Grande River. (21) The Boquillas Canyon Trail provides visitors with spectacular views of the river. (22) And after a long day of hiking, the park’s natural hot springs offer visitors an opportunity to soothe their feet in 105 °F water. (23) One of the most popular Big Bend experiences is paddling through Santa Elena Canyon, whose limestone mesas loom over 1,500 feet over the river below. (24) Paddlers can watch turtles sun on rocks while great blue herons and green kingfishers fly alongside the boats. (25) Adventurous paddlers can also experience the thrill of class IV rapids. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B (26) For those looking for less strenuous activities, Big Bend contains many historic sites. (27) Visitors can encounter signs of the park’s early indigenous inhabitants at the Burro Mesa Archaeological District. (28) At the Sam Nail Ranch, there is a windmill from the early 1900s that still pumps water. (29) Another popular attraction is the Castolon Historic District, which was established in the early twentieth century. (30) Today, visitors can shop at the 100‑year‑old Castolon store. (31) It sells a variety of snacks and other goods to park visitors. (32) The park opened in 1944 which during its first year attracted visitors of only 1,409. (33) The park was originally staffed by five people. (34) Today, Big Bend employs more than 100 full-time staff members and averages over 200,000 visitors per year. 13. Raul needs to include a stronger thesis statement in his essay. Which sentence should replace sentence 5 to best accomplish this goal? a. With miles of hiking trails, rafting, wildlife, and incredible scenery, Big Bend has something extraordinary to offer everyone. b. A wide variety of activities are offered at this park, so all visitors to Big Bend should be able to find at least one thing that would appeal to them. c. There is hiking and rafting for adventurous visitors, but there is also wildlife and scenery for those visitors who might prefer a quieter visit to Big Bend. d. Depending on what your interests are, all visitors to Big Bend should be able to find an activity from hiking and rafting, to observing wildlife or different landscapes. 14. Raul wants to add a supporting sentence to the second paragraph (sentences 6–13). Which sentence should be added after sentence 8? a. Most of the fish species in Big Bend are the size of minnows, but there are also large catfish. b. Nearly a quarter of the animal species native to North America can be found in Big Bend. c. If actions are not soon taken, many endangered species will be lost forever. d. Tropical rain forests, which are not found in North America, would have more animal species. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 15. Raul did not offer an effective transition between the third paragraph (sentences 14–22) and the fourth paragraph (sentences 23–25). Which sentence should be added just before sentence 23? a. Maybe you are someone who would enjoy your time rafting on the Rio Grande River. b. Another fun and exciting option for visitors to the park is to go rafting and paddling on the Rio Grande River. c. Visitors who would like to explore the many canyons created by the river can do that by deciding to go on one of the park’s rafting trips. d. Guests looking to enjoy some cooler water can rent a raft and explore the park’s miles of canyons. 16. Raul would like to add another sentence to the fifth paragraph (sentences 26–31). The site features a quarry dating back over 12,000 years that was used as a source for chipped stone tools. Where is the most effective place to insert this sentence? a. After sentence 26 b. After sentence 27 c. After sentence 28 d. After sentence 29 17. What is the most effective way to revise sentence 32? a. In 1944, when the park opened, there were only 1,409 visitors during the entire year. b. A total of 1,409 people only visited the park in 1944 during the first year. c. That year when the park first opened, only 1,409 people actually visited back in 1944. d. 1,409 people was the number of visitors to the park during the first year when it was opened, which was in 1944. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Read the selection and choose the best answer to each question. José wrote this paper to describe the history of the Panama Canal. Read José’s paper and look for corrections he needs to make. Then answer the questions that follow. The Panama Canal (1) Throughout most of history, a ship captain who wanted to travel from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean had to make a long journey around the southern tip of South America. (2) This meant that a 12,000‑mile voyage from a port in New York City to one in San Francisco took more than two months. (3) As early as the 1500s, visionaries looked for a shortcut to link the two oceans. (4) However, it wasn’t until 1904 that the vision began to become a reality. (5) Ten years later the Panama Canal was finished, it changed shipping and travel for the entire world. (6) Panama is the southernmost country in Central America. (7) It includes a thin strip of land known as an isthmus. (8) At their narrowest point, this piece of land separates the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans by less than 50 miles and links North and South America. (9) Many people agreed that this narrow waterway was the ideal location for a canal that would connect the two oceans, but building such a structure wasn’t as simple as digging an enormous trench across the land. (10) It was an arduous process, and developers faced many challenges disease-carrying mosquitoes, rugged terrain, and heavy rainfall. (11) There was also a problem with the sea level on each coast. (12) The Pacific Ocean is about 85 feet higher than the Atlantic Ocean. (13) To enable ships that were traveling from the English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B Atlantic to get to the height of the Pacific, the Panama Canal had to include a system of locks and gates known as the Panama Water Lock System. (14) A lock is a water-filled chamber that opens and closes, permitting ships to come in and out. (15) Once a ship is inside a locked area, the water can be slowly raised or lowered. (16) A ship travels through several lock gates to complete the journey through the canal. (17) This process can take from 8 to 10 hours, which may seem like a very long time to move less than 50 miles. (18) But when compared to the time it had taken for ships to go all the way around the tip of South America, this was of minimal concern. (19) In fact, the completion of the Panama Canal dramatically reduced travel times for ships all around the world. (20) For example, trips between New York and San Francisco were shortened by 8,000 miles. (21) And the United States wasn’t the only country that benefited from using the canal. (22) The canal allowed for faster travel between Europe and East Asia as well. (23) This made it a major factor in expanding global trade. (24) In 2016, after another rigirous construction program, an expansion to the Panama Canal opened. (25) The expansion doubled the capacity of the canal and allowed much larger ships to pass through. (26) Today, about 14,000 ships use the canal every year. (27) Interested tourists can even book a cruise through this engineering marvel. (28) The Panama Canal has been referred to as “one of historys’ most incredible examples of large-scale engineering.” (29) As a result, the American Society of Civil Engineers has recognized the Panama Canal as one of the seven wonders of the modern world. (30) To date, more than a million ships have passed through this marvel, and it’s likely that these numbers will continue to grow in the future. 18. Sentence 5 is written incorrectly. Select the response that corrects this sentence. Ten years later the Panama Canal was and travel for the entire world. English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 19. What change is needed in sentence 10? a. Change It to Theirs b. Change developers to develepers c. Insert a colon after challenges d. Change mosquitoes to Mosquitoes 20. What change needs to be made in sentence 24? a. Change after to there was b. Change rigirous to rigorous c. Change the comma after program to a colon d. Change opened to opens English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B ANSWER KEY Question Answer TEKS Question Type Skill Assessed State % # Correct “Acoustic Sculpture, Sound Art, and the Music of the Sea” (2023 English II EOC) 1 B 2A Multiple Choice using print/digital 75% dictionary 2 A 7Dii Multiple Choice text structure & thesis 60% 3 C 8C Multiple Choice graphic & author’s 80% purpose 4 D 4G Multiple Choice key idea & detail 67% 5 B 8B Multiple Choice text structure to achieve 68% author’s purpose Leaping Falls (2023 English II EOC) 6 Part A: B 4F Multi Part inference & text 65% Part B: B evidence 7 A 7B Multiple Choice poetry line breaks 61% 8 A 8F Multiple Choice imagery contributes to 45% tone Paired Passage Questions (English II EOC 2023) 9 B 4H Multiple Choice synthesize - comparing 50% speaker’s/author’s perspectives 10 A&C 4H Multiselect synthesize - theme 74% similarities 11 A 4H Multiple Choice synthesize - how do the 37% descriptions differ 12 D 4H Multiple Choice synthesize - how do the 63% author & poet agree? “Big Bend National Park” - Revising (English II EOC 2023) 13 A 9Bi Multiple Choice revising thesis 49% 14 B 9Bii Multiple Choice developing/adding 76% supporting detail English II Summative Assessment Units 2A & 2B 15 D 9Bi Multiple Choice transitional sentence 33% between paragraphs 16 B 9Bi Multiple Choice adding supporting detail 41% 17 A 9C Multiple Choice revising for 61% clarity/fluency “The Panama Canal” - Editing (English II EOC 2024) 18 finished, 9Di Inline Choice Correcting a comma 53% changing splice shipping 19 C 9Dv Multiple Choice Correctly using a colon 77% to introduce a list 20 B 9Dvi Multiple Choice Correcting spelling 66% errors

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser