Sample Test
English Second Paper
Class Six and Seven
Full marks: 50
Time: 2 hours
[Answer all the questions. Figures in the margin indicate full marks]
A: I need to make (a) _____ appointment with my dentist.
B: Why don't you use my phone?
A: Thank you. Oh dear, I can hear (b) _______ engaged tone. I'll try again later.
B: Which dentist do you go to?
A: I go to (c) _______ one next to (d) _____ supermarket on (e) _____ Tajmahal Road.
B: How is he?
A: He's (f) ________ excellent dentist! You hardly feel any pain when he pulls out (g) ____ tooth.
B: Could I have (h) ______ telephone number of your dentist, please? My grandmother needs to have her teeth checked.
A: Of course. It's 9663422.
Answer: (a) an, (b) an, (c) the, (d) the, (e) X, (f) an, (g) a, (h) the
till | inX2 | behind | at | on | from | under |
Hi Tina!
We're looking forward to seeing you (a) ...... next Sunday (b) …………….. the St. Martin's Island. We're having a great time here. Panna and I run (c) ……………… the mornings. Alok gets our breakfast (d) ……………… a local restaurant. Then from about ten o'clock (e) ………………… lunch we do what we want. (f) ……………….. night, we cook our meal. There's a wood (g) ……………….. the hotel and sometimes I go for a walk. I am now writing you sitting (h) ………………….. a Banyan tree. The weather is beautiful here. We are missing you a lot.
See you soon.
Abir
Answer: (a) on, (b) in, (c) in, (d) from, (e) till, (f) at, (g) behind, (h) under
teacher | and | quick | missing | but | go | good | so | worry | sit |
Hello Nina
This is just a (a)......... e-mail. I hope you're getting well (b) …………… will be back at school on Sunday. I know you are worried about the (c) ……………….. classes. Don't (d) ……………. . Here is a list of homework.
Maths: Finish page 72 and 74 (e) ………………… don't do page 73. (f) ………………….. said that we'd do it in the next lesson.
Chemistry: (g) ……………………….. through the pages from 67 to 82 and do the exercises. We will (h) …………………. for a class test on Thursday.
I didn't get (i)………………………. marks in the last class test. (j) ……………………… I'm going to study really hard this time.
Take care.
Deepali
Answer: (a) quick, (b) and, (c) missing, (d) worry, (e) but, (f) teacher, (g) go, (h) sit, (i) good j.so
It's better to Plastic bottles Extracting petroleum So we should | be use | bad for the rainforest. made from petroleum. use plastic bottles again and again. glass bottles. |
Answer: It's better to use glass bottles. Plastic bottles are made from petroleum. Extracting petroleum is bad for rainforest. So we should use plastic bottles again and again.
a) Bangladesh is beautiful. (Make it interrogative.) b) Rabindranath titled this country 'Sonar Bangla'. (Make it Passive.) It is one of the greenest countries in the world. c) This country was ruled by the British and the Pakistani people before independence. (Make it active.) The country has so many beautiful aspects. The Sunderbans, the mangrove forest, is really wonderful. d) Cox's Bazar sea beach is the longest in the world. (Use positive degree). People here are very liberal. e) How proud we are of our country! (Make it a statement sentence.)
Answers:
a) Isn't Bangladesh beautiful ?
b) This country was titled 'Sonar Bangla' by Rabindranath Tagore.
c) The British and the Pakistani people ruled this country before independence.
d) No other sea beach in the world is as long as Cox's Bazar.
e) we are very proud of our country.
My name's is Bibha. I live with my mom. My dad (a) …………… ('live' in the negative sense) with us because he (b) ............(work) …………………………. ('live' in the in Saudi Arabia. I haven't got any brothers or sisters and so I (c) .........(spend)............ a lot of time with my cousin Tushi. I often remember the days with my dad. When I (d)............(be)............. a baby, I (e).......... ('make' expressing habit)................. my dad a horse to take a ride. Not only that, every day he (f)..........(tell)…………… me many interesting stories. My mother nowadays says that we (g)...........(Shift)…………. to Saudi Arabia soon, but I really don't want to leave this country. Rather, I prefer my father to (h) ...........(stay).............. here with us.
Answer: (a) does not live, (b) works, (c) spend, (d) was, (e) used to make (f) told, (g) shift, (h) stay
"lend me your pen please", asad asked. i took my pen out of my pocket. "i'll give it back to you in a moment" he promised. "don't worry you can keep it as long as you want" i said.
Answer: "Lend me your pen please," Asad asked. I took my pen out of my pocket. "I'll give it back to you in a moment," he promised. "Don't worry, you can keep it as long as you want," I said.
MCQ can be set for testing a number of strategies and skills related to reading such as scanning, skimming, reading for gist, inferencing (guessing the meaning from the context) comprehension check etc. Each MCQ item will carry ½ mark. However, depending on the level of difficulty some items may have 1 mark as well.
In preparing MCQ item, question setters will make sure that learners have to apply certain skills or strategies of reading in order to be able to choose the right options. Depending on the level of the learners, items will be set to test learners' lower order thinking skills (knowing and understanding) as well as higher order and more critical thinking (analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating). Use synonyms in the questions to avoid quoting directly from the original passage. Make the questions a bit round about so that learners think.
For example:
Text: The Great Wall of China, one of the greatest wonders of the world, was first built between 220-206 BC.
Question: When was the Great Wall first built? (Don't make this type of question. Student will just get the answer from the question paper as 'was born' is common in both the text in the question paper and the answer.)
Question: What is the initial construction period of the Great Wall? (This question is Okay as learners has to understand that 'was built' and 'construction period' are same.)
Students will write the question number and then write only a/b/c/d that refers to the correct answer. Whole sentence from the question paper is not required.
The same text can be used for guessing the meaning from the context and Question Answer (open ended and close ended). However, the same text cannot be used for Question-Answer and True/False. Depending on difficulty level and text length, information transfer and True/False questions can be set from the same text or from two different texts. Two different texts are preferred to a single text.
Please note the following points while setting MCQ test items:
In designing MCQs the following class wise guidelines have to be followed.
Altogether 10 MCQs will be set. Each MCQ will have ½ mark (or half mark) for a correct answer. There should be 6 MCQs on vocabulary test (guessing meaning from the context) and 4 MCQs on answering questions (scanning for specific information, search reading, deducing the meaning of unfamiliar words). Thus the marks distribution will be:
Vocabulary ½ X 6 = 3
Questions ½ X 4 = 2
Total = 5
True-false questions are typically used to measure the ability to identify whether statements of fact are correct. The questions are usually a declarative statement that the student must judge as true or false.
Follow the general guidelines below while writing True/False items for your students:
There is no need of a separate reading text for matching. The question itself will have a context after the texts in part A and part B are properly matched. The numbering of texts in column A can be i. ii. iii, iv..... and the texts in column B can be a, b, c, d........ Students only need to match the numbering in the two columns, e.g i, ii, iii, iv etc. (in column A) and a, b. c. d etc. (in column B). You can also use 3 columns with texts to match.
The text in the gap filling activity is separate and complete. The text for this item will have a meaningful context too. There will be five gaps in the text. The gaps can be used for article, preposition, or any other parts of speech without verb as there is separate test for it. A question setter will choose one particular item mentioned earlier to set a question and use a gap at the particular place. For example, if the question setter wants to test the article then there will be a gap at the position of a, an, the or before a noun that does not take any article. For a question of 3 marks, there will be six gaps in the text; for 4, there will be 8 gaps; and for 5 marks there will be ten gaps.
Follow the guidelines while writing gap filling test items:
A cloze test is a fill-in-the-blank activity that assesses students' comprehension of vocabulary and reading passages or knowledge of grammatical items. In cloze tests there are recurrent gaps at every 4th, 5th, 6th or 7th word. If the first gap, for example, is used at the 5th place, all through the text the gap will be at the 5th place. Unlike the gap filling activity that tests a particular grammar item (e.g. preposition, article, pronoun, or verb) it is a test for vocabulary (key words) in general. This is why gap filling activity in the reading section is usually a cloze test. In contrast, gap filling activity is a merely a grammar test item.
A cloze test with 5 marks will have ten gaps (.5 for each gap). Considering the level of difficulty cloze tests without clues at grade 10 can have 5 gaps (1 mark for each gap).
In answering the question, an examinee does not need to reproduce the text in the answer script. Writing the missing word with the corresponding question number is enough. However, the whole text with suitable words in the gaps will neither earn any extra credit or discredit.
Information Transfer
Depending on the level of difficulty and length of the text, information transfer and True/False questions can be set from the same text. However, if the text is too small, do not use the same text for both the tests as the content will be inadequate for setting questions. Make sure there is no overlapping or repetitions in the question you have set. Alternatively you can use two different texts for these two test items.
The marks allocated for information transfer is 1X * 5 = 5 or 0.5 * 10 = 5 (depending on the level of difficulty)
Rearranging
Rearranging measures students' ability to organize some detached sentences into a coherent and cohesive text. Use 10 detached sentences for classes 6, 7, and 8 (See the sample questions for these grades.). For SSC, Ss will rearrange eight parts of a story/passage (See the sample question for SSC.). Test your test item (with someone else or you sit for a test) to check whether the sequence of the answer vary. If the answer varies and each variety has a complete meaning, redesign the test. Use linking words/sentence connectors to maintain cohesion and coherence in the text. Learners do not need to reproduce the text in their answer scripts. If they arrange the corresponding serial of the texts correctly (such as b. d. a, f or v, iii, vi. i ... etc), they will get full credit. Please remember that the test objective here is the organisation of sentences, not the copying of texts from the question paper. However if any learner comes with sentences written in a random text, there is no need to penalize him/her. Students will get credits for the correct answers. For example, if the answer is like this:
a. X b. ✓ c.✓ d. X e. ✓ f. ✓ g. X h. X i.✓ j. X the student will get 5 marks.
The test has no relation with the texts used in the previous test items.
Question setters have to go by the following class-wise guidelines in setting questions.
Grades 6-7
There will be 5 open ended questions each bearing 2 marks for the correct answer. There will be 2 questions for recalling answer, 2 questions to check students' understanding, and 1 question for analyzing information.
A list of action verbs according to Bloom's Taxonomy for lower order and higher order thinking questions are supplied here to be used while designing the test items.
Remembering/recalling: describe, define, list, locate, tell
Understanding: describe, classify, discuss, explain, identify, select, translate, predict
Analysing: solve, use, interpret, sketch, illustrate, classify, differentiate, organise, relate, identify, categorise, compare, contrast, construct, distinguish, explain, Evaluating: argue, defend, judge, select, support, value, critique, assess, justify
Creating: construct, develop, investigate, design, imagine, justify
(for more information please visit: http://cft.vanderbitt.edu/guides-sub-pages/blooms-taxonomy/)
For e-mails, student must write the e-mail id, subject, and content as written in a genuine email. Students should be taught in the class that there should be a considerable margin at the answer script. However, there should not be any penalty for any examinee if the answer script has no margin. Margin has nothing to do with assessment of the answer.
Word limit should be mentioned in the question paper. Again the word limit is 150 words for classes 6-7, 170 words for class 8, and 200 for classes 9-10 with 10% plus minus.
Graph should be authentic. Teachers may collect charts from various sources such as newspapers, magazines, books or from the internet. Alternatively, teachers can use authentic data and make simple charts by themselves. Describing a graph or chart needs certain language abilities. The graph and chart presented in the textbook show that. A marker of answer scripts should keep an eye whether those languages are used or not. Answers will include the written presentation of data shown in the graph followed by a concluding remark. A question setter should mention the word limit for describing the graph or chart. Do not ask students to produce any graph on the answer sheet. They will only describe it.
The writers and the editor of the book would, first of all, like to thank the NCTB officials who put in a lot of effort in the preparation of the book.
They are, then, grateful to the specialists who gave their valuable opinions and suggestions for the improvement of the book.
Lastly, they are indebted to the authors from whose books ideas and materials have been collected. The books that have been consulted are as follows: -
Raymond Murphy: English Grammar in Use
Jeremy Harmer et all: Just Grammar Book 3: Intermediate
Wren and Martin: High School English Grammar and Composition
Jahurul Islam: A B C of English Grammar
A Handbook of Paragraph Writing
David Wills: Collins Cobuild Student's Grammar
B. A. Phythian: Good English
Prof. Md. Irshadullah and Prafulla Kumar De Sarkar: A Text-Book of Higher English Grammar
John E. Warriner, William Renison, Francis Griffith: English Grammar and Composition 10
Prafulla Kumar De Sarkar: A Text-Book of Higher English Grammar, Composition and Translation
Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum: A University Grammar of English
Longman Contemporary English- Longman
Longman Essential Activator-Longman
Collins Cobuild English Grammar- The Cobuild Series from the Bank of English
Collins Cobuild English Usage - The Cobuild Series from the Bank of English
Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
The writers and the editor are also thankful to all the people who were associated with the publication of the book.
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