Reading: Multiple Choice

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading: Open Response
Advertisements

THE LITERACY TEST Test Day
Thomas A. Stewart Literacy Test (OSSLT) Prep Guide 2013
What is the OSSLT? Adapted from EQAO - OSSLT Preparation and Planning Guide.
Thomas A. Stewart Literacy Test (OSSLT) Prep Guide 2013
Thomas A. Stewart Literacy Test (OSSLT) Prep Guide 2013
Practice Literacy Test (OSSLT) Scoring Guide St. Mary’s HS - November 2014.
Literacy Test Preparation
Winston Churchill Literacy Test (OSSLT) Prep Guide 2013.
OSSLT The Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test.
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test 2015 Information Session October 8 th, :00 p.m.
Long Writing Tasks  You will have two long writing tasks to complete on the literacy test  1) A News Report  2) A Series of Paragraphs (an essay) 
OSSLT 2014 With additional material from Mr. Kitchen.
Writing Tasks on the Literacy Test  On the literacy test, you will have two long writing tasks  1) A News Report  and  2) A Series of Paragraphs (Opinion.
Breakdowns and Question Types
HEY YOU IN GRADE 10! How about a few pointers for that LITERACY TEST?
O ntario S econdary S chool L iteracy T est Thursday March 29 th 2012.
Introduction to the OSSLT (FORMAT OF THE TEST ; language & KEY WORDS)
Preparing for the OSSLT At North Park Secondary School.
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test at PCSS
How can I help my child with reading at Home? 1. Motivating Kids to Read Studies show that the more children read, the better readers and writers they.
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
To earn an Ontario Secondary School Diploma (OSSD), you must complete:  30 credits (18 compulsory and 12 elective)  40 community involvement hours 
PREPARING FOR THE OSSLT Thursday, March 27 Glenforest S. S. (
OSSLT The Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test.
O S S L T March 27th EQAO ONTARIO SECONDARY SCHOOL LITERACY TEST.
Cardinal Ambrozic Catholic Secondary School
P REPARING FOR THE OSSLT ( Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test )
The Writing Section of the SAT Strategies for the Multiple Choice Questions.
Literacy Test Preparation Grade 10 History Booklet 2, Section VII: Reading Pages 18, 19, 20 Booklet 1: Section I: Writing Pages 3, 4, 5.
OSSLT Prep Week. OSSLT Test – Thursday, March 26 Each day this week, we will look at one area of the test. Monday – Multiple Choice & The Graphic Text.
OSSLT PREP SESSION This presentation will provide you with tips and help you to prepare for the following tasks on the OSSLT: Writing a summary paragraph.
Second Grade Curriculum Night. Guided Reading  Expectations.
OSSLT The Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test.
OSSLT Test Preparation
Literacy Lesson 4: “On My Own” Short Writing Tasks November 18, Period 1.
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test March 31, 2016.
Sight Words.
P REPARING FOR THE OSSLT ( Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test )
MAY 9 TH -12 TH MAY SATs What Form will the Tests Take? In May 2016, Year 6 children will be the first to take the new SATs papers. These tests.
LITERACY TEST STRATEGIES. Literacy Test Format  The literacy test has a variety of reading selections and questions Types of Questions  Multiple choice.
To earn an Ontario Secondary School Diploma (OSSD), you must complete:  30 credits (18 compulsory and 12 elective)  40 community involvement hours 
Literacy Test Preparation Created and Compiled by K. MacDonald 2010.
OSSLT PREP MS. CORMIER ROOM 182 TUESDAY & LUNCH 11:45-12:15PM Sign-in.
Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test
Teacher Reference (Please use electronic version with class)
Lesson #5: Series of Paragraphs (Long writing Task)
PREPARING FOR THE OSSLT 2016
The Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test
Preparing for the osslt
Father Michael Goetz Catholic Secondary School
Lesson #4: Short Writing Tasks
Literacy Test Preparation
Teacher Reference (Please use electronic version with students)
Preparing for the OSSLT
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test Info
Teacher Reference (Please use electronic version with class)
Lesson #5: Series of Paragraphs (Long writing Task)
Father Michael Goetz Catholic Secondary School
Literacy Test Preparation
Father Michael Goetz Catholic Secondary School
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test Info
PREPARING FOR THE OSSLT March 30, 2017
PREPARING FOR THE OSSLT
Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test (EQAO)
Father Michael Goetz Catholic Secondary School
OSSLT Get Ready!.
Teacher Reference (Please use electronic version with class)
Father Michael Goetz Catholic Secondary School
Presentation transcript:

Reading: Multiple Choice Thomas A. Stewart Literacy Test (OSSLT) Prep Guide 2013 Reading: Multiple Choice

To help you navigate the guide, the TAS Logo is a link to the Table of Contents Introduction This guide is intended to be a resource for students, teachers and parents. It has several sections covering what to expect, how these questions are marked, examples of good and bad answers with explanations for why. Throughout the guide there are suggestions, tips and hints. You can jump from section to section or go through the guide in order. We recommend visiting this guide more than once.

Sample Question Decoding the OSSLT Types of Questions Other Guides Table of Contents Sample Question Decoding the OSSLT Types of Questions Explicit Implicit Making Connections Other Guides

OSSLT-speak Decoding the OSSLT: The OSSLT has its own special terminology. It’s important to know what their terms mean. Selection: A “selection” is the thing they have you read…it might be part of a book, a story from a magazine, something from a website, but basically it’s the thing you need to base your answers on. Prompt: The “prompt” is basically the question. For a Series of Paragraphs Expressing an Opinion the “prompt” will be the topic they want you to write about. Response: Your “response” is your answer; what you write about the “selection” in answer to the “prompt.” Scoring: “Scoring” is the word they use for marking or grading. Your score on each question is called a Code. So if you get 30 they call it a Code 30. Conventions: Spelling, grammar, sentence structure and punctuation.

Reading: Multiple Choice In the actual booklet there is no headline explaining the article. The Photo basically takes the place of the headline and introduces what the “selection” is all about. EXAMPLE: A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton. This is an example of a reading question. First, look at the Photo.

Reading: Multiple Choice There are three (3) different kinds of Multiple Choice Questions: 1 – Explicit – you can get the answer directly from the text. 2 – Implicit – to get the answer you will have to make an inference, that is think about what you’ve read and come to some conclusion – put “2 and 2 together.” 3 – “Making Conections” – these are the hardest ones. You will have take the information from the text and draw a conclusion based on what you’ve learned.

Reading: Multiple Choice OK, we’ve looked at the photo (Don’t they look happy? They didn’t even have a Literacy test.). Now it’s time to read the article. BTW The OSSLT people call everything you read a “selection.”

Reading: Multiple Choice The story will appear a paragraph at a time each time you click A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton.

Reading: Multiple Choice A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton.

Reading: Multiple Choice EXAMPLE: 1 Explicit ? – Can you get the answer directly from the text? Multiple-Choice (Record the best or most correct answer on the Student Answer Sheet.) 1 In 1920, few mining and forestry settlements in Northern Ontario had schools, because the settlements lacked a roads. b money. c children. d teachers. Click on me to return to the story What kind of question do you think this is? 3 “Making Conections?” – Are you being asked to take the information from the text and draw a conclusion based on what you’ve learned? 2 Implicit ? – Do you have to make an inference? Are they asking you to think about what you’ve read and come to a conclusion – put “2 and 2 together?”

Reading: Multiple Choice EXAMPLE: Multiple-Choice (Record the best or most correct answer on the Student Answer Sheet.) 1 In 1920, few mining and forestry settlements in Northern Ontario had schools, because the settlements lacked a roads. b money. c children. d teachers. In 1920, few mining and forestry settlements in Northern Ontario had schools, because the settlements lacked a roads. b money. c children. d teachers. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” It’s Explicit We get the answer directly from the text. The answer is: b) money

Reading: Multiple Choice A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton.

Reading: Multiple Choice EXAMPLE: 1 Explicit ? – Can you get the answer directly from the text? Multiple-Choice (Record the best or most correct answer on the Student Answer Sheet.) 3 Which of the following was not served by a rail car classroom? a “forestry settlements” (line 2) b “few towns” (line 3) c “remote settlements” (lines 5–6) d “tiny communities” (line 10) OK, now what kind of question do you think this is? 2 Implicit ? – Do you have to make an inference? Are they asking you to think about what you’ve read and come to a conclusion – put “2 and 2 together?” 3 “Making Conections?” – Are you being asked to take the information from the text and draw a conclusion based on what you’ve learned?

Reading: Multiple Choice EXAMPLE: Watch the “not” here. They’ve made it bold to make sure you notice. Multiple-Choice (Record the best or most correct answer on the Student Answer Sheet.) 3 Which of the following was not served by a rail car classroom? a “forestry settlements” (line 2) b “few towns” (line 3) c “remote settlements” (lines 5–6) d “tiny communities” (line 10) Which of the following was not served by a rail car classroom? a “forestry settlements” (line 2) b “few towns” (line 3) c “remote settlements” (lines 5–6) d “tiny communities” (line 10) Again, what kind of question do you think this is? It’s Implicit – You have to make an inference and figure out where the school trains didn’t go. They didn’t go to the “few towns” that could afford to build real schools.

Reading: Multiple Choice A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton. The same sentence has provided two answers…that’s not always going to be the case but, as you see, it could happen.

Reading: Multiple Choice You need to re-read the selection on questions like these. In Line 12 the article it says right out: “The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938.” Which one of these answers backs that up? EXAMPLE: Multiple-Choice (Record the best or most correct answer on the Student Answer Sheet.) 4 What supports the idea that the “experiment” was a success? a Children and adults showed up. b Some towns opened their own schools. c Highways were built in Northern Ontario. d A passenger rail car was converted into a museum. What supports the idea that the “experiment” was a success? a Children and adults showed up. b Some towns opened their own schools. c Highways were built in Northern Ontario. d A passenger rail car was converted into a museum. This is a “Making Conections” Question– You are being asked to take the information from the text and draw a conclusion based on what you’ve learned. What is the proof that the idea to use schools on rails worked? This is the only proof that makes sense and comes from the selection. The fact a rail car is now a museum is in the last line of the article.

Reading: Multiple Choice Here’s our first clue. We know they were a success, now all we have to do is keep reading to find something that relates to the four choices. A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton. A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton. A little-known but interesting example of Northern Ontario’s history is the school on rails. By the 1920s, mining and forestry settlements were scattered along the network of railway lines of Northern Ontario. A few towns had grown large enough to pay for their own schools, but the outposts could not afford such “luxury.” In 1922, a North Bay school superintendent pushed for an experiment to bring schools to these remote settlements by converting passenger rail cars into classrooms. These cars contained desks, blackboards and books and a small apartment for the teacher. After being on display at the Canadian National Exhibition (a major fall fair) in Toronto, the first two cars left for northeastern Ontario in 1926. For four days at a time, the cars rested at railway sidetracks in the tiny communities. Children hiked or came by horse and sled several kilometres for their education, and at night the school car became a place of learning and social activity for adults. The experiment was so successful that seven cars were in operation by 1938. However, during the 1950s extensive highway construction turned many trackside towns into deserted settlements. In 1967, one of the last school cars was shuttled into a Toronto rail yard. But that was not to be its final stop. The people of Clinton, Ontario, purchased the well-worn car to honour their fellow citizen Fred Sloman. Sloman, the car’s last teacher, taught on railway cars from 1926 until his retirement in 1965. Today the restored car tells its story of Northern Ontario life, as a museum in Clinton. And here it is.

Thomas A Stewart OSSLT Guide TAS OSSLT Guides: How the test is marked and why this matters Reading Questions: Open Response Reading Questions: Multiple Choice Writing Questions: Series of Paragraphs Writing Questions: Open Response Short Writing Writing Questions: News Report How to prepare for the OSSLT Overview of the OSSLT