THE DUNGEON OF LOST WORDS
A 6th Grade D&D Vocabulary Quest
COMPLETE STUDY GUIDE + ADVENTURE CAMPAIGN + ANSWER
KEY
This PODCAST explores a new method of loci, or "memory palace," The Dungeon of Lost Words, an educational resource designed to help MIDDLE SCHOOL students master Tier 3 ELA vocabulary and academic concepts. It combines a comprehensive study guide with an interactive Dungeons & Dragons-style campaign where learners navigate rooms by answering questions about literary elements, poetry terms, and grammar. The text provides detailed definitions, etymologies, and examples for over sixty essential terms ranging from protagonist and theme to complex Greek and Latin roots. Students use a character sheet to track their health and progress as they encounter challenges themed around an enchanted library, a forge, and a final boss. By integrating STAAR-aligned learning with a narrative adventure, the source aims to make academic preparation engaging and memorable. This multifaceted guide serves as both a vocabulary reference and a practical test-prep tool for young scholars.
The Dungeon of Lost Words: A Vocabulary Quest Adventure
60+ Tier 3 ELA Vocabulary Words |
STAAR Aligned | Printable
|
HOW
TO USE THIS DOCUMENT PART
1 — COMPLETE VOCABULARY REFERENCE: All 60+ Tier 3 ELA words with definitions,
etymologies, and examples. Use for word wall, flash cards, and independent
study. PART
2 — THE DUNGEON CAMPAIGN: A choose-your-own-adventure dungeon crawl with 18
vocabulary questions (3 per room). Circle your answer. Each wrong answer
costs 5 HP. Start with 20 HP. PART 3 — ANSWER KEY: Full
explanations for all 18 campaign questions at the end of this document. |
|
CHARACTER
SHEET Name:
_______________________________ Class: Word Scholar Starting
HP: 20 | Current HP: ___ |
Questions Correct: ___ / 18
| Mistakes: ___ HP Tracker — Cross out a heart for every wrong answer
(each wrong = -5 HP): ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ |
PART 1: COMPLETE VOCABULARY REFERENCE
|
PART 1 — COMPLETE VOCABULARY REFERENCE All 60+ Tier 3 ELA Terms |
Definitions | Etymologies
| Examples |
SECTION A: LITERARY ELEMENTS (22 Terms)
|
PROTAGONIST Definition: The main
character in a story or play; the one who drives the action and faces the
central conflict. Etymology: Greek: proto- (first) + agonistes (actor/contestant). Proto- =
first. Related: protocol, prototype, antagonist. Example: "Harry Potter is the protagonist
— every major decision and obstacle centers on him." |
|
ANTAGONIST Definition: A character or
force in conflict with the protagonist; the opposing force. Etymology: Greek: anti- (against) + agonistes (actor). Anti- = against.
Related: antibiotic, antisocial, antidote. Example: "Voldemort is the antagonist — he
creates every major obstacle Harry must overcome." |
|
CHARACTERIZATION Definition: The methods an
author uses to develop and reveal a character's personality (appearance,
actions, speech, thoughts, others' reactions). Etymology: Latin: character (distinctive mark) + -ization (process of).
From Greek kharaktēr = engraved mark. Example: "Through her gentle speech and
quick thinking, the author's characterization reveals her as wise and
brave." |
|
PLOT Definition: The sequence of
events in a story: exposition, rising action, climax, falling action,
resolution. Etymology: Old English/French: plot (a piece of ground, later a
plan/scheme). Related: subplot, plotline. Example: "The plot of the story follows a
young girl who discovers her family's secret." |
|
SETTING Definition: The time and
place in which a story takes place, including historical period and
geographic location. Etymology: Old English: settan (to place). Related: settle, offset,
reset. Setting = where/when things are placed. Example: "The setting — a crumbling castle
in medieval Scotland — creates a dark, mysterious mood." |
|
THEME Definition: The central
message or universal insight about human experience that an author
communicates through a work; usually a complete statement. Etymology: Greek: tithenai (to place) → thema (something set down).
Related: thesis, synthesis, antithesis, epithet. Example: "The theme of the novel is that
true courage means acting despite fear, not the absence of fear." |
|
CONFLICT Definition: The struggle
between opposing forces in a story; may be internal (within a character) or
external (character vs. outside force). Etymology: Latin: con- (together) + flictus (struck). Root fligere = to
strike. Related: inflict, afflict, friction. Example: "The central conflict is the
hero's battle against the corrupt governor who seized her village." |
|
INTERNAL CONFLICT Definition: A psychological
struggle within a character's own mind (character vs. self); often involves a
decision or emotion. Etymology: Latin: internus (within) + conflictus (struck together).
Inter- = within/between. Related: internal, interior, interval. Example: "She faces internal conflict when
she must choose between loyalty to her friend and telling the truth." |
|
EXTERNAL CONFLICT Definition: A struggle
between a character and an outside force: another person, society, nature, or
fate. Etymology: Latin: externus (outside) + conflictus. Extern- = outside.
Related: exterior, external, extend, export. Example: "The external conflict between
the boy and the raging river drives the story's tension." |
|
FORESHADOWING Definition: Hints or clues
an author plants early in a text that suggest what will happen later in the
story. Etymology: Old English: fore- (before) + sceadwian (to shadow). Fore- =
before. Related: foresee, forecast, foreword, foreground. Example: "The dark clouds and the
stranger's warning are foreshadowing of the disaster to come." |
|
FLASHBACK Definition: An interruption
in chronological order that takes readers to an earlier event; used to reveal
background information. Etymology: Modern compound: flash + back. Flash = sudden burst; back =
returning to past. Literary technique from early 20th century. Example: "A flashback reveals why the
soldier refuses to carry a weapon — a childhood trauma explained it
all." |
|
IRONY Definition: When the actual
outcome or meaning differs from what is expected. Types: verbal (saying
opposite of what you mean), situational (unexpected outcome), dramatic
(reader knows more than characters). Etymology: Greek: eirōneia (dissembling). Related: ironic, ironically. Example: "It is situational irony that the
fire station burned down." |
|
MOTIF Definition: A recurring
element — image, idea, phrase, or symbol — that appears throughout a work and
has thematic significance. Etymology: French: motif (motive/theme) from Latin: motivus (moving).
Related: motivate, motive, motion, motor. Example: "Light and darkness are a
recurring motif in the novel, representing knowledge vs. ignorance." |
|
MOOD Definition: The feeling or
atmosphere a writer creates for the reader through word choice, setting, and
imagery. Etymology: Old English: mod (mind, feeling). Related: gloomy, moody. Mood
in music also = emotional feeling. Example: "The dripping rain and empty
streets create a mood of loneliness and dread." |
|
TONE Definition: The author's
attitude toward the subject or audience, revealed through word choice and
style (not the same as mood). Etymology: Greek: tonos (stretch/sound) → Latin tonus. Related:
intonation, monotone, tonal, overtone. Example: "The author's tone is sarcastic —
she describes the corrupt politician as a 'true champion of honesty.'" |
|
SYMBOLISM Definition: The use of
objects, characters, colors, or actions to represent larger ideas or abstract
concepts beyond their literal meaning. Etymology: Greek: symbolon (thrown together) from syn- (together) +
ballein (to throw). Related: symbol, symbolic, emblem. Example: "The broken compass is a symbol
of the character's loss of direction in life." |
|
CLIMAX Definition: The turning
point or most intense moment in the plot; the point of highest tension after
which events begin to resolve. Etymology: Greek: klimax (ladder/staircase). Related: anticlimax,
climactic. Klimax = ascending series. Example: "The climax occurs when the
detective finally confronts the murderer in the abandoned warehouse." |
|
RESOLUTION Definition: The conclusion
of the story where the central conflict is resolved; also called the
denouement. Etymology: Latin: resolvere (to loosen again) from re- (again) + solvere
(to loosen). Related: resolve, solution, dissolve, absolve. Example: "In the resolution, the two
feuding families make peace after their children's sacrifice." |
|
EXPOSITION Definition: The opening
section of a narrative that introduces the setting, characters, and
background situation. Etymology: Latin: exponere (to set forth) from ex- (out) + ponere (to
place). Related: expose, export, express, explicit. Example: "The exposition establishes that
the story takes place in futuristic Chicago, 100 years after the flood." |
|
RISING ACTION Definition: The series of
events and complications that build tension and lead toward the climax. Etymology: Old English: risan (to rise) + Latin: actio (doing). Rising =
ascending; action = events that move the plot. Example: "The rising action includes three
failed attempts to rescue the princess before the final confrontation." |
|
FALLING ACTION Definition: Events that
follow the climax and lead toward the resolution; tension decreases during
this phase. Etymology: Old English: feallan (to fall) + Latin: actio. Opposite of
rising. Falling = descending toward conclusion. Example: "During the falling action, the
hero tends to her wounds and learns the cost of her victory." |
|
NARRATOR Definition: The voice or
character who tells the story; the narrator may or may not be a character in
the story. Etymology: Latin: narrare (to tell a story) → narrator. Related: narrate,
narrative, narration. Narrare = to relate/recount. Example: "The narrator tells us she is 12
years old but admits she cannot always remember events correctly — making her
unreliable." |
SECTION B: POETRY TERMS (15 Terms)
|
STANZA Definition: A grouped set
of lines in a poem, functioning like a paragraph; separated by white space. Etymology: Italian: stanza (room/stopping place) from Latin: stare (to
stand). Related: stance, circumstance, substance. Example: "Each stanza of the poem focuses
on a different season of the year." |
|
RHYME SCHEME Definition: The pattern of
rhyming sounds at the ends of lines in a poem, labeled with letters (ABAB,
ABCABC, etc.). Etymology: Old French: rime (rhythm/rhyme) + Middle English: scheme.
Rhyme from Greek rhythmos = flowing motion. Example: "The poem's rhyme scheme is ABAB
— lines 1 and 3 rhyme, lines 2 and 4 rhyme." |
|
METER Definition: The regular
pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry; creates a musical
rhythm. Etymology: Greek: metron (measure). Related: metric, geometry
(geo+metry), thermometer, diameter. Example: "Shakespeare's sonnets use iambic
pentameter — ten syllables alternating unstressed and stressed." |
|
FREE VERSE Definition: Poetry that
does not follow a consistent rhyme scheme or meter; sounds more like natural
speech. Etymology: French: vers libre (free line). Vers = line/verse (from Latin
versus = turning of a plow). Free = unrestricted. Example: "Walt Whitman's free verse poems
do not rhyme, but their rhythm feels like waves rising and falling." |
|
ALLITERATION Definition: The repetition
of the same initial consonant sound in two or more nearby words; used for
rhythm and emphasis. Etymology: Latin: ad- (to) + littera (letter) → allitteratio. Root
littera = letter. Related: literature, literal, literate. Example: "Peter Piper picked a peck of
pickled peppers — the repeated /p/ sound is alliteration." |
|
ASSONANCE Definition: The repetition
of similar vowel sounds in nearby words (not the same as rhyme, which matches
end sounds). Etymology: Latin: assonare (to sound to) from ad- + sonare (to sound).
Root sonus = sound. Related: sonic, resonance, consonance. Example: "The rain in Spain stays mainly
in the plain — the long /a/ sound repeats (assonance)." |
|
CONSONANCE Definition: The repetition
of consonant sounds within or at the end of words in close succession
(distinct from alliteration, which is initial sounds only). Etymology: Latin: con- (together) + sonare (to sound). Related:
consonant, dissonance, resonance, unison. Example: "She sells seashells — the
repeated /s/ and /l/ sounds throughout are consonance." |
|
ONOMATOPOEIA Definition: A word that
phonetically imitates the sound it describes. Etymology: Greek: onoma (name) + poiein (to make). Onoma = name/word.
Related: synonym, antonym, anonymous. Example: "Buzz, hiss, crash, sizzle,
crackle — all are onomatopoeia because they sound like what they mean." |
|
IMAGERY Definition: Language that
appeals to the senses (sight, sound, touch, taste, smell) to create a vivid
mental picture. Etymology: Latin: imago (likeness/picture). Related: image, imagine,
imagination, imaginary. Example: "The imagery of warm bread,
crackling fire, and pine-scented air makes the cabin feel real to the
reader." |
|
PERSONIFICATION Definition: A figure of
speech that gives human qualities, emotions, or behaviors to non-human things
(objects, animals, abstract ideas). Etymology: Latin: persona (mask/person) + -fication (making). Related:
person, personal, impersonate, personnel. Example: "The wind whispered secrets
through the pine trees — the wind cannot literally whisper
(personification)." |
|
COUPLET Definition: Two consecutive
lines of poetry that usually rhyme and form a complete thought. Etymology: French: couplet (small pair) from coupler (to couple).
Related: couple, coupling, couples. Example: "Shakespeare ended his sonnets
with a couplet that summed up the poem's message in two rhyming lines." |
|
QUATRAIN Definition: A stanza or
poem of four lines, usually with a rhyme scheme. Etymology: French: quatrain from Latin: quattuor (four). Related:
quadrant, quarter, quartet, quadrilateral. Example: "The poem has three quatrains
followed by a couplet — a common sonnet structure." |
|
REFRAIN Definition: A repeated line
or group of lines in a poem or song, often at the end of each stanza. Etymology: Old French: refraindre (to repeat) from Latin: refringere (to
break back). Re- = back. Related: refrain (to hold back). Example: "The refrain 'nevermore' repeats
at the end of each stanza in Poe's The Raven." |
|
DICTION Definition: A writer's
deliberate choice of words, including their sound, formality, and connotative
weight. Etymology: Latin: dictio (act of saying) from dicere (to say). Related:
dictate, dictionary, predict, contradict, verdict. Example: "The author's formal diction —
using 'adversary' instead of 'enemy' — makes the character sound
educated." |
|
LYRIC POEM Definition: A short poem
expressing personal feelings or emotions, often musical in language; not a
narrative. Etymology: Greek: lyrikos (singing to the lyre) from lyra (lyre).
Related: lyric, lyrics (song words), lyrical. Example: "Sonnets and odes are lyric poems
— they express the speaker's personal feelings rather than telling a
story." |
SECTION C: TIER 3 ACADEMIC VOCABULARY (29
Terms)
|
CENTRAL IDEA Definition: The most
important point an author makes about the topic; expressed as a complete
sentence that all details support. NOT the same as the topic. Etymology: Latin: centralis (center) + Greek: idea (form/concept).
Centrum from Greek kentron = sharp point. Related: central, concentrate,
eccentric. Example: "Topic: sharks. Central idea:
Sharks are vital to ocean ecosystems and are far more endangered than
dangerous." |
|
SUPPORTING DETAILS Definition: Facts,
examples, statistics, quotes, or anecdotes that explain and prove the central
idea. Etymology: Latin: supportare (to carry from below) from sub- (under) +
portare (to carry). Related: support, portable, import, transport. Example: "The central idea that exercise
improves grades is supported by details about blood flow to the brain." |
|
SUMMARIZE Definition: To give a
brief, objective restatement of the main points of a passage in your own
words without personal opinion. Etymology: Latin: summa (the highest/total) + -ize. Related: sum,
summary, summit, assume, consume. Example: "A good summary of a news article
covers who, what, when, where, and why — briefly and neutrally." |
|
PARAPHRASE Definition: To restate text
in your own words while keeping the original meaning intact; longer than a
summary. Etymology: Greek: para- (beside/alongside) + phrazein (to tell). Para- =
alongside. Related: phrase, paraphrase, paragraph. Example: "Instead of copying the quote,
paraphrase it: put the author's idea in your own words and sentence
structure." |
|
INFERENCE Definition: A logical
conclusion drawn from textual evidence plus prior knowledge when the
information is not directly stated. Etymology: Latin: in- (into) + ferre (to carry/bring) → inferre. Root
ferre = to bear. Related: transfer, refer, conference, fertile. Example: "The character slams the door and
refuses to speak — we infer she is furious, though the text never says
so." |
|
EVIDENCE Definition: Facts, quotes,
data, or examples from the text used to support an argument, claim, or
inference. Etymology: Latin: evidentia (clearness) from e- (out) + videre (to see).
Related: evident, video, vision, provide, revise. Example: "Cite the evidence: include the
exact words or details from the text that prove your point." |
|
CITE Definition: To quote or
reference a specific source or piece of textual evidence; to give credit to
where information came from. Etymology: Latin: citare (to call/summon). Related: recite, citation,
incite, excite. Example: "When you cite a line from the
poem, put the line number in parentheses after the quote." |
|
ANALYZE Definition: To examine the
parts of a text closely and explain how they work together to create meaning. Etymology: Greek: ana- (up/throughout) + lyein (to loosen). Ana- =
throughout. Related: analysis, analyst, paralysis. Example: "Analyze how the author's use of
flashback reveals the character's motivation." |
|
COMPARE Definition: To identify and
explain the similarities between two or more things. Etymology: Latin: com- (together) + parare (to prepare/set equal).
Related: comparison, comparable, pair. Example: "Compare the two characters'
responses to failure: both give up at first, then try different
strategies." |
|
CONTRAST Definition: To identify and
explain the differences between two or more things. Etymology: Latin: contra- (against) + stare (to stand). Related:
contrary, contradict, counter, controversy. Example: "Contrast the settings: the city
is loud and chaotic, while the forest is silent and orderly." |
|
EVALUATE Definition: To judge the
quality, validity, importance, or effectiveness of something using criteria
or evidence. Etymology: Latin: e- (out) + valere (to be strong/worth). Related: value,
valid, valuable, equivalent, evaluate. Example: "Evaluate the author's argument:
Is the evidence credible? Is the reasoning logical?" |
|
AUTHOR'S PURPOSE Definition: The reason an
author wrote a text. The three major categories are: to persuade, to inform,
and to entertain (PIE). Etymology: Latin: auctor (creator) + propositum (intention). Auctor from
augere = to originate. Related: authority, auction, augment. Example: "The author's purpose in writing
the editorial is to persuade readers to support stricter environmental
laws." |
|
TEXT STRUCTURE Definition: The
organizational pattern used to arrange ideas in a text: chronological,
cause/effect, compare/contrast, problem/solution, or description. Etymology: Latin: structura (building) from struere (to build). Related:
construct, instruct, destroy, obstruct, infrastructure. Example: "Signal words like 'therefore'
and 'as a result' indicate a cause/effect text structure." |
|
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE Definition: Language used
in a non-literal way to create images, comparisons, or emotional effects
beyond ordinary meaning. Includes metaphor, simile, personification,
hyperbole, alliteration. Etymology: Latin: figura (form) from fingere (to shape). Related: figure,
figment, configuration, transfigure. Example: "'The wind was a howling wolf' is
figurative language — wind does not literally howl like a wolf." |
|
CONNOTATION Definition: The emotional
associations or cultural feelings a word carries beyond its literal
dictionary definition. Etymology: Latin: con- (together) + notare (to mark). Related: notation,
notable, annotate, denote. Example: "'Home' and 'house' have the same
denotation but different connotations — home feels warm and personal." |
|
DENOTATION Definition: The literal,
dictionary definition of a word; its objective, factual meaning. Etymology: Latin: de- (from) + notare (to mark). De- = away from/down
from. Related: note, notation, annotate. Example: "The denotation of 'serpent' is
simply a snake, but its connotation is evil and danger." |
|
OBJECTIVE SUMMARY Definition: A concise,
unbiased restatement of a text's main ideas written in third person; does not
include personal opinion. Etymology: Latin: objectivus (presented to the senses) + summarium
(sum/total). Related: object, objective, subjective. Example: "An objective summary of the
article would report the facts the scientist found without saying whether you
agree." |
|
CLAIM Definition: A statement or
assertion presented as true, especially in argument or persuasive writing;
must be supported by evidence. Etymology: Latin: clamare (to shout/declare). Related: exclaim, proclaim,
reclaim, acclaim, clamor. Example: "The student's claim is that
school should start later; she supports it with three research studies." |
|
COUNTERCLAIM Definition: An opposing
argument or objection raised against the writer's central claim; a strong
argument addresses and refutes the counterclaim. Etymology: Latin: contra- (against) + clamare (to declare). Counter- =
opposing. Related: counterargument, counteract. Example: "The counterclaim that later
school starts hurt parents' schedules was addressed and rebutted." |
|
THESIS Definition: The central
argument or controlling idea of an essay; a complete sentence that states the
writer's position and previews the main points. Etymology: Greek: thesis (something set down) from tithenai (to place).
Related: antithesis, synthesis, hypothesis, parenthesis. Example: "A strong thesis is specific: not
'Social media is bad' but 'Unregulated social media harms teens' mental
health.'" |
|
GENRE Definition: A category or
type of literature with shared conventions: fiction, nonfiction, poetry,
drama, fantasy, biography, etc. Etymology: French: genre (kind/sort) from Latin: genus (birth/kind).
Related: generate, gender, general, generous, genetics. Example: "Identifying the genre helps the
reader predict the text's structure, purpose, and conventions." |
|
POINT OF VIEW Definition: The perspective
from which a story is narrated: 1st person (I/me), 2nd person (you), 3rd
person limited (one character's thoughts), or 3rd person omniscient (all
characters' thoughts). Etymology: Latin: punctum (point) + videre (to see). Related: video,
vision, evident, supervise. Example: "Written in first person, the
narrator's point of view limits us to only what she knows and feels." |
|
COHESION Definition: The quality of
ideas being logically connected and flowing smoothly; achieved through
transitions, pronouns, and repeated key words. Etymology: Latin: cohaerere (to cling together) from co- (together) +
haerere (to stick). Related: cohere, coherent, adhesive. Example: "Good writers use cohesion — each
paragraph connects to the next through transitional phrases." |
|
TRANSITION Definition: A word, phrase,
or sentence that connects ideas within or between paragraphs to create smooth
flow. Etymology: Latin: transitio (a going across) from trans- (across) + ire
(to go). Related: transport, transfer, translucent. Example: "Transitions like 'however,' 'in
addition,' and 'as a result' signal how ideas are connected." |
|
METAPHOR Definition: A figure of
speech that directly states one thing IS another unlike thing, creating a
comparison without using like or as. Etymology: Greek: meta- (over/across) + pherein (to carry). Meta- =
change. Related: metaphysics, metamorphosis, peripheral. Example: "'Life is a rollercoaster' is a
metaphor — life is directly equated with a rollercoaster without using
'like.'" |
|
SIMILE Definition: A figure of
speech that compares two unlike things using the words like or as. Etymology: Latin: similis (like/similar). Related: similar, similarity,
simulate, assimilate, facsimile. Example: "'Her smile was like sunshine
after a storm' — the word 'like' makes this a simile, not a metaphor." |
|
HYPERBOLE Definition: An extreme
exaggeration used for emphasis or comic effect that is not meant to be taken
literally. Etymology: Greek: hyper- (over/beyond) + ballein (to throw). Hyper- =
excessive. Related: hyperactive, hyperlink, hypertension. Example: "'I've told you a million times!'
is hyperbole — the speaker has not literally spoken a million times." |
|
CONTEXT CLUES Definition: Words, phrases,
or sentences surrounding an unfamiliar word that help the reader determine or
approximate its meaning. Etymology: Latin: contextus (connection) from con- (together) + texere
(to weave). Related: text, textile, texture, context. Example: "'The obstinate, stubborn mule
refused to move no matter what' — context clues reveal obstinate means
stubborn." |
|
ANTECEDENT Definition: The noun or
noun phrase that a pronoun refers back to; the pronoun takes its meaning from
the antecedent. Etymology: Latin: ante- (before) + cedere (to go). Related: precede,
concede, ancestor, antebellum, recede. Example: "In 'Maria lost her backpack,'
the antecedent of 'her' is 'Maria.'" |
SECTION D: GREEK & LATIN ROOTS (20
Roots)
Knowing these roots unlocks hundreds of unfamiliar words — on
STAAR and beyond. Study each root, its meaning, and its related words.
|
ROOT
(MEANING) |
DEFINITION
+ RELATED WORDS |
|
BIO- (life) |
Greek root meaning life. —
Etymology: bios (life) — Examples: biography, biology, biome, antibiotic,
symbiotic |
|
GRAPH- (write/draw) |
Greek root meaning write. —
Etymology: graphein (to write) — Examples: autograph, paragraph, graphic,
biography, photograph |
|
PORT- (carry) |
Latin root meaning carry. —
Etymology: portare (to carry) — Examples: transport, portable, import,
export, report, support |
|
DICT- (say/speak) |
Latin root meaning say. —
Etymology: dicere (to say) — Examples: dictate, dictionary, predict,
contradict, verdict, diction |
|
SCRIB/SCRIPT- (write) |
Latin root meaning write. —
Etymology: scribere (to write) — Examples: describe, manuscript, inscription,
prescribe, subscribe |
|
CRED- (believe) |
Latin root meaning believe.
— Etymology: credere (to believe) — Examples: credible, credit, incredible,
creed, credentials |
|
BENE/BON- (good) |
Latin root meaning
good/well. — Etymology: bene/bonus (good) — Examples: benefit, bonus,
benevolent, benefactor, beneficial |
|
MAL- (bad) |
Latin root meaning bad/ill.
— Etymology: malus (bad) — Examples: malfunction, malevolent, malice,
malnutrition, malady |
|
TRACT- (pull/draw) |
Latin root meaning pull. —
Etymology: trahere/tractum (to pull) — Examples: attract, tractor, subtract,
contract, extract, detract |
|
VERT/VERS- (turn) |
Latin root meaning turn. —
Etymology: vertere (to turn) — Examples: convert, reverse, divert, invert,
version, controversy |
|
FLECT/FLEX- (bend) |
Latin root meaning bend. —
Etymology: flectere (to bend) — Examples: reflect, flexible, deflect,
genuflect, inflection |
|
RUPT- (break) |
Latin root meaning break. —
Etymology: rumpere/ruptum (to break) — Examples: interrupt, rupture, erupt,
corrupt, bankrupt, abrupt |
|
PED/POD- (foot) |
Greek/Latin root meaning
foot. — Etymology: pes/pedis;
pous/podos — Examples: pedal, podium, pedestrian, centipede,
expedition |
|
LOG- (word/reason) |
Greek root meaning
word/study. — Etymology: logos (word/reason) — Examples: logic, catalog,
prologue, epilogue, monologue, dialogue |
|
SPECT/SPEC- (look/see) |
Latin root meaning look. —
Etymology: specere (to look) — Examples: inspect, spectator, perspective,
spectacle, suspect |
|
JECT- (throw) |
Latin root meaning throw. —
Etymology: jacere/jectum (to throw) — Examples: eject, project, reject,
inject, subject, trajectory |
|
MIT/MISS- (send) |
Latin root meaning send. —
Etymology: mittere/missum (to send) — Examples: transmit, dismiss, mission,
emit, submit, omit, missile |
|
MOT/MOV- (move) |
Latin root meaning move. —
Etymology: movere/motum (to move) — Examples: mobile, motion, motor, promote,
remote, emotion, commotion |
|
GRAD/GRESS- (step/go) |
Latin root meaning step. —
Etymology: gradi/gressum (to step) — Examples: graduate, progress, aggress,
digress, regress, transgress |
|
ONYM/ONOM- (name) |
Greek root meaning name. —
Etymology: onoma/onyma (name) — Examples: synonym, antonym, pseudonym,
acronym, anonymous, onomatopoeia |
STAAR QUICK REFERENCE — AUTHOR'S PURPOSE
& TEXT STRUCTURE
AUTHOR'S PURPOSE — Remember: PIE
|
PURPOSE |
DEFINITION |
SIGNAL
WORDS / CLUES |
|
PERSUADE |
Author wants to convince
the reader to believe or do something |
Should, must, ought, best,
worst, everyone agrees, clearly, obviously |
|
INFORM |
Author wants to teach
facts, explain concepts, or describe how things work |
First, next, for example,
in fact, research shows, according to |
|
ENTERTAIN |
Author wants to engage the
reader through story, humor, or creative writing |
Characters, plot, dialogue,
narrative, once upon a time, she felt |
TEXT STRUCTURES — The 5 Patterns
|
STRUCTURE |
HOW IT
ORGANIZES INFO |
SIGNAL
WORDS |
|
CHRONOLOGICAL (Sequence) |
Events told in time order
(first to last) |
first, next, then, after,
finally, dates, years |
|
CAUSE / EFFECT |
Explains why something
happens and what results |
because, therefore, as a
result, consequently, due to |
|
COMPARE / CONTRAST |
Shows similarities and/or
differences |
however, similarly, both,
unlike, on the other hand, whereas |
|
PROBLEM / SOLUTION |
Identifies a problem and
proposes one or more solutions |
the problem is, one
solution, to solve, as a result of solving |
|
DESCRIPTION |
Lists characteristics,
traits, and examples about a topic |
for example, such as,
including, characteristics, specifically |
|
PART 2 — THE DUNGEON CAMPAIGN A Vocabulary Quest Through 7 Dungeon Chambers | 18
Questions | Printable Adventure HOW TO PLAY: Read the
passage. Circle your answer (A, B, C, or D). If you answer correctly, check
the treasure box and continue to the next room. Wrong answer = -5 HP. Try
again until you get it right, but track every wrong attempt. Answer Key is in
Part 3. |
ROOM I: THE ENCHANTED HALLWAY
|
READ ALOUD: The dungeon's
iron doors swing open with a moan. A long stone corridor stretches before
you, lit by flickering torches that cast dancing shadows on the walls.
Ancient runes glow faintly — words of power etched by long-dead sorcerers.
Two stone doors block your path, each sealed with a glowing sigil. The sigils
pulse: "Answer our riddles and we shall let you pass." |
CHALLENGE
1 Word:
ALLITERATION
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The dungeon's ancient stone
walls were covered in runes that seemed to whisper and writhe in the
torchlight. A carved plaque near the entrance bore a warning in flowing
script: "Beware the beast below — bold, brutal, and bloodthirsty beyond
belief." Your mentor, the great Wordmage Elowen, once explained that
poets and sorcerers alike have used the power of repeated sounds for
thousands of years, long before the printing press existed, to make language
more memorable, musical, and magical. The technique appears throughout Old
English epic poetry, Norse sagas, and modern advertising — anywhere a writer
wants the words themselves to feel alive. |
QUESTION: Based on the passage and the plaque's
warning, which of the following BEST defines alliteration?
|
A |
The repetition of the same
initial consonant sound in nearby words, used to create rhythm or emphasis |
[ ] |
|
B |
The use of words that
imitate the sounds they describe, such as "buzz" or
"crash" |
[ ] |
|
C |
A comparison between two
unlike things using the words "like" or "as" |
[ ] |
|
D |
The repetition of a vowel
sound in the middle of multiple nearby words |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
2 Word:
ANTECEDENT
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): Scrawled on the hallway
wall in charcoal was a riddle: "The great dragon guards its treasure
jealously, for it knows the gold represents power." Your logic training
kicks in — you ask yourself: to what does the word "it" refer?
Without knowing the noun that came before the pronoun, the sentence would
dissolve into confusion. Elowen's grammar scrolls explained that every
pronoun must have a clear noun that came before it — without this
relationship, writing becomes ambiguous and meaning collapses like a poorly
constructed bridge. |
QUESTION: Which of the following MOST accurately
defines the term antecedent as used in English grammar?
|
A |
A word or phrase that a
pronoun refers back to, typically appearing before the pronoun in the text |
[ ] |
|
B |
A punctuation mark used to
show possession or to form contractions |
[ ] |
|
C |
A sentence that contains
two independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction |
[ ] |
|
D |
A story told from the
perspective of a character who died before the story began |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
3 Word:
FORESHADOWING
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): Near the end of the
hallway, you notice a mosaic on the floor showing a hero falling into
darkness, a broken sword beside them, and a raven perched on a skull. The
caption reads: "What is shown before the event occurs prepares the
reader's mind and heightens dread. Ancient storytellers planted these seeds
deliberately — small details early in the tale that only make full sense when
the tragedy finally arrives." A scholar's journal beside the mosaic
adds: "These narrative clues work because our minds love patterns. Once
the terrible event happens, the reader thinks: of course — I should have seen
it coming." |
QUESTION: Based on the passage and the mosaic, which of
the following BEST defines foreshadowing?
|
A |
The central message or
universal truth that an author communicates through an entire literary work |
[ ] |
|
B |
An interruption of the
story's timeline to describe an event that happened before the main story
began |
[ ] |
|
C |
Hints or clues an author
places early in a text that suggest what events will occur later in the story |
[ ] |
|
D |
The point of highest
tension in a narrative after which events begin to move toward resolution |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
HALLWAY CLEARED! Check your treasure:
Torch of Clarity, Scroll of Grammar, Lens of Foresight. Proceed to Room II! |
ROOM II: THE CRYPT OF ECHOES
|
READ ALOUD: Cold air
rushes over you as you descend into the Crypt of Echoes. The walls are lined
with stone sarcophagi, each carved with a single word. Ghostly voices repeat
those words in endless loops: "meaning... feeling... shadow..." A
skeletal hand bursts from one coffin, clutching a glowing test scroll.
"Two more riddles, young Scholar. Only knowledge breaks these
seals." |
CHALLENGE
4 Word:
CONNOTATION
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): In the crypt, you discover
a dusty journal written by a failed adventurer named Aldric. On one page he
wrote: "I passed a group of men — some called them 'warriors,' others
called them 'thugs,' and a few called them 'soldiers.'" Although all three
words technically referred to the same group of armed men, the feelings each
word produced in the reader were entirely different. A trained reader, Aldric
noted, must always examine not only what a word literally means, but the
emotional weight and cultural associations the word carries — feelings built
up over centuries of use that hover around the word like a shadow follows a
flame. |
QUESTION: Based on Aldric's observation, which of the
following BEST defines connotation?
|
A |
The dictionary definition
of a word that can be found in any reference text |
[ ] |
|
B |
The emotional associations
and cultural feelings that a word suggests beyond its literal meaning |
[ ] |
|
C |
The grammatical category of
a word, such as noun, verb, adjective, or adverb |
[ ] |
|
D |
A literary device in which
a writer describes non-human things as if they have human qualities |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): Deep in the crypt, you find
two letters written about the same event — a great fire that destroyed a
village. The first letter, written by the village mayor, used words like
"devastating," "heartbreaking," and "irreplaceable
loss." The second, written by the mayor's political enemy, used words
like "unfortunate setback," "minor disruption," and
"a chance to rebuild better." The events described were identical.
The facts were the same. But the attitude each writer brought to the subject
— their emotional relationship to it, revealed through every word they chose
— transformed the emotional meaning of the letters entirely. |
QUESTION: Based on the passage about the two letters,
which of the following BEST defines tone in a piece of writing?
|
A |
The emotional atmosphere or
feeling that a piece of writing creates in the reader |
[ ] |
|
B |
The author's attitude
toward the subject or audience, revealed through word choice and style |
[ ] |
|
C |
The sequence of events in a
story from introduction through resolution |
[ ] |
|
D |
The lesson or universal
message that an author communicates through a literary work |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
6 Word:
SYMBOLISM
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): In one sarcophagus you find
a painting of a dove carrying an olive branch, a skull beneath a crown, and a
broken chain. A scholarly inscription reads: "The most powerful writers
have always known that objects can carry more meaning than any explanation.
When readers see a dove, they do not need to be told it represents peace —
centuries of cultural use have embedded that association into the image. When
writers deliberately use an object, color, animal, or action to stand for
something larger than itself, they are practicing one of literature's most
ancient and powerful techniques." |
QUESTION: Based on the inscription, which of the
following BEST defines symbolism?
|
A |
A comparison between two
unlike things using the connecting words "like" or "as" |
[ ] |
|
B |
The feeling of tension or
suspense that an author creates through pacing and word choice |
[ ] |
|
C |
The use of objects,
characters, or actions to represent larger ideas or abstract concepts beyond
their literal meaning |
[ ] |
|
D |
The repetition of the same
initial consonant sound in two or more nearby words |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
CRYPT CLEARED! Treasure earned: Gem of
Nuance, Mirror of Tone, Dove of Symbols. Proceed to Room III! |
ROOM III: THE FORBIDDEN LIBRARY
|
READ ALOUD: The door
opens into an enormous chamber — bookshelves stretching fifty feet high,
teetering with volumes older than the kingdom. Books float through the air,
opening and closing on their own, whispering their contents. In the center of
the room, an enormous hourglass begins counting down. "Knowledge is the
only currency accepted here," a voice warns. |
CHALLENGE
7 Word:
INFERENCE
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): A note on the reading desk
read: "A true scholar never waits to be told everything. When you read
that a character pulls their coat tighter, glances at the frost-covered
window, and moves closer to the fire, the text does not announce: 'It is
cold.' Yet the skilled reader assembles the evidence and arrives at the
conclusion independently." The best readers, the note continued, are
detectives — they use clues within the text combined with their own
background knowledge to reach logical conclusions the author leaves unstated. |
QUESTION: Based on the reading desk note, which of the
following BEST defines the term inference?
|
A |
Copying an important
sentence from the text word-for-word to support an argument |
[ ] |
|
B |
A conclusion a reader
reaches by combining textual evidence with prior knowledge when the
information is not directly stated |
[ ] |
|
C |
A type of figurative
language that uses exaggeration for comic or dramatic effect |
[ ] |
|
D |
The main idea of a passage,
stated explicitly in the first or last sentence |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): Deep in the library, a
skeleton clutched a poetry book. The last poem read: "The moon was a
ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas." You knew the moon was not
literally a ship, and the sky was not literally an ocean — yet the image felt
more true than a plain description ever could. The poetry guide beside the
skeleton explained that when writers describe things in ways that are not
literally true but that create vivid images, emotions, or comparisons, they
are using language that departs from ordinary, everyday meaning in order to
achieve an artistic effect that plain language cannot accomplish. |
QUESTION: Which of the following statements MOST
accurately describes figurative language and how it differs from literal
language?
|
A |
Figurative language refers
only to the use of rhyme and meter in poems and songs |
[ ] |
|
B |
Figurative language
describes only real, observable facts about the world without any artistic
embellishment |
[ ] |
|
C |
Figurative language uses
words or expressions in non-literal ways to suggest comparisons, create
imagery, or convey emotion beyond ordinary meaning |
[ ] |
|
D |
Figurative language is
found only in fiction and never appears in informational or persuasive texts |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): One enormous tome was
titled "The Architecture of Comparison." It explained: "There
are two great comparison tools in a writer's arsenal. The first says one
thing IS another: 'Life is a journey.' The second uses 'like' or 'as' to
acknowledge the comparison openly: 'Life is like a journey.' Both create
powerful connections between unlike things in the reader's imagination. But
one demands total fusion — it insists the two things are the same. The other
is more polite — it admits the comparison is a comparison. The boldest
writers often prefer the first; the clearest writers often prefer the
second." |
QUESTION: Based on the passage, which of the following
BEST distinguishes a metaphor from a simile?
|
A |
A metaphor uses the words
"like" or "as" to compare two unlike things, while a
simile does not |
[ ] |
|
B |
A metaphor creates a direct
comparison by stating that one thing IS another, while a simile uses
"like" or "as" to compare |
[ ] |
|
C |
A metaphor can only be used
in poetry, while a simile can appear in any type of writing |
[ ] |
|
D |
A simile compares real
things, while a metaphor always involves impossible or fantastical
comparisons |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
LIBRARY MASTERED! Treasure: Lens of
Logic, Blade of Comparison, Wand of Imagery. Proceed to Room IV! |
ROOM IV: THE BEAST'S LAIR
|
READ ALOUD: A deep,
earth-shaking roar fills the cavern as you enter a vast underground arena.
The chimera — three-headed, fire-breathing, and surprisingly well-read —
towers before you. "I am Grammaticus, Guardian of Narrative!" it
bellows. "Answer my riddles about the art of storytelling, or become my
dinner, little Scholar!" |
CHALLENGE
10 Word:
PROTAGONIST
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The Beast presented a
scroll: "Prove your knowledge or be devoured!" The scroll described
a story in which one central character drove every major decision, faced the
greatest obstacles, and changed most dramatically by the final chapter. Ancient
storytellers from Homer to Shakespeare built their narratives around this
character, who the audience roots for and whose fate they care about most. In
contrast, the character who opposes this central figure and creates conflict
is called something else entirely. Without this primary figure, every story
would collapse — there would be no one to follow, no journey to witness, no
transformation to celebrate. |
QUESTION: Based on the scroll's description, which of
the following MOST accurately defines the term protagonist?
|
A |
The narrator who tells the
story from an outside perspective without participating in the events |
[ ] |
|
B |
The central character of a
story, typically the one who drives the action and faces the main conflict |
[ ] |
|
C |
A minor character who
provides comic relief and does not affect the central plot |
[ ] |
|
D |
The villain or antagonist
whose actions create obstacles for other characters |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
11 Word:
THEME
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The second beast head
presented a harder challenge. It described several famous stories: a boy
wizard who defeats a dark lord through love, not power; a runaway slave who
learns that freedom must be claimed, not granted; a wandering soldier who
discovers that home is not a place but a feeling. "What is the hidden
lesson connecting all these tales?" the beast demanded. "Not the
plot — not WHAT happens — but the universal truth ABOUT human experience that
the story conveys. A great reader does not merely follow events like a train
follows tracks; a great reader extracts the deeper meaning — the message the
author wants the world to understand." |
QUESTION: Which of the following BEST defines the
literary term theme, as described by the beast?
|
A |
The sequence of events that
occur in a story from beginning to end, including rising action, climax, and
resolution |
[ ] |
|
B |
The central message or
universal insight about human experience that an author communicates through
a literary work |
[ ] |
|
C |
The time and place in which
a story takes place, including the historical period and geographic location |
[ ] |
|
D |
The way an author uses
descriptive words and details to create a picture in the reader's mind |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
12 Word:
CONFLICT
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The third beast head
roared: "Every story is driven by struggle! In one tale, a girl battles
a raging river to save her brother — the struggle is between her and the
water. In another, a boy wrestles with whether to report his father's crime —
the struggle is within his own mind. A great scholar knows that narrative
tension comes from exactly this kind of opposition — and that it takes
different forms depending on whether the force opposing the character comes
from outside or from inside." The scroll continued: "Classify the
struggle, and you classify the story." |
QUESTION: Based on the passage, which of the following
BEST explains the difference between internal and external conflict?
|
A |
Internal conflict occurs
between two characters, while external conflict occurs between a character
and a supernatural force |
[ ] |
|
B |
Internal conflict is a
struggle within a character's own mind or emotions, while external conflict
is a struggle between a character and an outside force such as another
person, nature, or society |
[ ] |
|
C |
Internal conflict always
leads to the climax, while external conflict always leads to the resolution |
[ ] |
|
D |
Internal conflict is found
only in poetry, while external conflict appears only in prose fiction |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
BEAST DEFEATED! Treasure: Shield of
the Hero, Book of Wisdom, Chain of Conflict. Proceed to Room V! |
ROOM V: THE FORGE OF FLAMES
|
READ ALOUD: The heat hits
you like a wall. In the center of a vast chamber, a titanic forge burns with
supernatural flame — violet and blue, the colors of knowledge itself. The
Forge Master, a towering humanoid of living magma, strikes his anvil with a
hammer made of compressed dictionaries. "I forge understanding from raw
words," he rumbles. "Prove you comprehend the tools of
language!" |
CHALLENGE
13 Word:
CONTEXT CLUES
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The Forge Master thrust a
challenge at you: "A scholar needs no dictionary — the words around the
mysterious word reveal its meaning, like a portrait surrounded by a gilded
frame that tells you who the subject is." He showed you a passage: "The
alchemist was known for his loquacious nature — he could speak for hours
without stopping, filling every silence with words until his listeners grew
exhausted." The Forge Master slapped the table: "You did NOT know
loquacious before you read this. But can you determine its meaning without
looking it up? The answer sits in the very same sentence." |
QUESTION: Based on the Forge Master's explanation and
the example passage, which of the following BEST defines context clues?
|
A |
Footnotes and glossaries at
the back of a book that define difficult words for the reader |
[ ] |
|
B |
The words, phrases, and
sentences surrounding an unfamiliar word that help the reader determine its
meaning |
[ ] |
|
C |
Words that have the same
spelling but different meanings depending on which language they come from |
[ ] |
|
D |
Prefixes and suffixes
attached to a root word that change or modify its original meaning |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
14 Word:
HYPERBOLE
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): While the forge blazed, a
small fire sprite recited poems to keep himself entertained. "I've told
you a million times!" he cried. "I'm SO hungry I could eat an
entire kingdom! This heat is hot enough to melt the sun itself!" You
recognized that the sprite was not literally claiming to have spoken a
million times, or to require an entire kingdom's food supply. These were
deliberate, spectacular overstatements — extremes of expression chosen not
because they were factually accurate but because they conveyed the intensity
of the feeling far more powerfully than any accurate description could
manage. |
QUESTION: The sprite's statements are examples of which
literary device?
|
A |
Onomatopoeia — using words
whose sounds imitate the thing they describe |
[ ] |
|
B |
Hyperbole — extreme
exaggeration used for emphasis or comic effect that is not meant to be taken
literally |
[ ] |
|
C |
Allusion — a brief,
indirect reference to a well-known person, place, text, or event |
[ ] |
|
D |
Personification — giving
human traits, emotions, or behaviors to non-human objects or animals |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
15 Word:
DICTION
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The Forge Master's final
challenge was a pair of passages describing the same thunderstorm. The first
read: "Rain fell. Thunder made noise. Lightning flashed." The
second read: "The heavens shattered open in a cascade of silver fury;
each thunderclap detonated like a cannon fired from the clouds; lightning
split the darkness with the cold precision of a surgeon's blade." The
Forge Master crossed his arms: "Same storm. Same facts. Completely
different effect. A master craftsman does not choose words by accident. Every
single word is a decision — and those decisions, taken together, determine
everything the reader feels, imagines, and remembers." |
QUESTION: Based on the two passages and the Forge
Master's explanation, which of the following BEST defines diction?
|
A |
The grammatical structure
of sentences within a passage, including the use of simple, compound, or
complex sentence types |
[ ] |
|
B |
A writer's deliberate
choice of words, including their sound, specificity, formality, and emotional
effect |
[ ] |
|
C |
The pattern of stressed and
unstressed syllables that creates rhythm in a poem or piece of prose |
[ ] |
|
D |
A figure of speech in which
a writer attributes human characteristics to non-human things |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
FORGE MASTERED! Treasure: Key of
Comprehension, Bolt of Exaggeration, Hammer of Diction. Proceed to Room VI! |
ROOM VI: THE THRONE ROOM
|
READ ALOUD: You emerge
into a vast throne room of black obsidian and pale moonstone. Three ghostly
advisors in tattered royal robes pace before an enormous empty throne. They
turn as one to face you. "The Word Lich's chamber lies just beyond this
door," the lead advisor whispers. "But first — prove you understand
the architecture of language itself." |
CHALLENGE
16 Word:
POINT OF VIEW
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): In the Throne Room sat
three ghostly advisors, each holding the same book — but each experiencing a
completely different story. The first spoke as "I," experiencing
every event directly. The second spoke as "you," placing the reader
inside the story. The third stood outside all characters, referring to
everyone as "he," "she," or "they," and knowing
the thoughts of all characters at once. "These are not the same
story," declared the head advisor. "The vantage point from which a
narrative is told reshapes everything: what information the reader receives,
which emotions feel most immediate, and how much the narrator can be
trusted." |
QUESTION: Which of the following BEST defines point of
view in a literary text?
|
A |
An author's personal
opinions about the events described in a nonfiction text, stated directly |
[ ] |
|
B |
The perspective from which
a story is narrated, including who tells the story and how much they know
about events and characters |
[ ] |
|
C |
The problem or conflict
that the main character must solve by the end of the story |
[ ] |
|
D |
A pattern of repeated
images or phrases that appears throughout a text as a motif |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
17 Word:
TEXT STRUCTURE
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The throne's armrests were
carved with five symbols. An engraving explained: "Every text is built
like a building — it has architecture. Wise writers do not simply pour words
onto the page; they arrange their ideas according to a plan. Some describe
events in the order they happened. Others explain why things happen and what
results follow. Others present two ideas and examine their similarities and
differences. Others identify a problem and propose its solution. The
architecture of information shapes how the reader understands, remembers, and
applies it." Signal words embedded in the writing are the reader's keys
to recognizing which plan the author chose. |
QUESTION: The term text structure refers to which of
the following?
|
A |
The font, spacing, and
visual layout that a publisher uses when printing a book |
[ ] |
|
B |
The organizational pattern
an author uses to arrange information or ideas within a text |
[ ] |
|
C |
A set of rules governing
correct grammar, punctuation, and sentence construction |
[ ] |
|
D |
The length and complexity
of the sentences an author uses throughout a piece of writing |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
18 Word:
CLAIM & EVIDENCE
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The final ghostly advisor
presented a stack of student essays and a scholarly guide. "Many
students confuse stating an opinion with making an argument," it said.
"An opinion is simply what you think. An argument is what you can prove.
The difference between them is this: an argument begins with a clear,
specific statement about what is true, and then it provides facts, data,
research, examples, or quotations to demonstrate that the statement is
correct. A truly advanced writer also addresses the strongest objection to
their position and explains why that objection does not defeat their
argument." The advisor set down the essays: "The ones who
understood this passed. The ones who did not are still here." |
QUESTION: Based on the advisor's explanation, which of
the following BEST describes the relationship between a claim and evidence in
argument writing?
|
A |
A claim is a factual
statement that needs no support, while evidence is the personal opinion the
writer adds to the argument |
[ ] |
|
B |
A claim is the central
assertion a writer makes about the topic, and evidence is the facts,
examples, or data used to support and prove that claim |
[ ] |
|
C |
A claim and evidence are
the same thing — both refer to direct quotations taken from the text being
analyzed |
[ ] |
|
D |
A claim appears only in the
conclusion of an essay, while evidence appears only in the introduction |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
THRONE ROOM CONQUERED! Treasure: Eye
of the Narrator, Blueprint of Thought, Seal of Argument. PREPARE FOR THE
FINAL BOSS! |
⚡ FINAL BOSS: THE WORD LICH'S CHAMBER ⚡
|
READ ALOUD: The chamber
is vast and dark, lit only by crackling purple lightning. In the center
floats the Word Lich — a towering skeleton draped in robes covered with
stolen words that writhe like living serpents across the fabric. In one bony
hand he holds the Lexicon of Ages, glowing with stolen power. "So,"
he hisses, "you have made it this far. Impressive — but my final riddles
have broken ten thousand scholars before you. This ends NOW." |
CHALLENGE
BOSS 1 Word:
AUTHOR'S PURPOSE
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The Word Lich, an ancient
skeletal sorcerer who had drained the meaning from thousands of books,
howled: "Every word ever written has a REASON. The author who wrote 'Buy
Clearance Products Now!' had one purpose. The author who penned 'On the night
her mother died, she understood for the first time what silence truly meant'
had another. And the professor who wrote 'The mitochondria is the powerhouse
of the cell' had yet another. Writers do not write in a vacuum — they write
TO DO something to the reader: to change their behavior, to make them feel,
or to make them know." He paused: "Name the three. Prove you
understand them." |
QUESTION: Which of the following BEST describes the
concept of author's purpose and correctly names all three major categories?
|
A |
The reason a writer writes
— to persuade the reader to adopt a belief or take action, to inform by
explaining facts and ideas, or to entertain through story, humor, or engaging
narrative |
[ ] |
|
B |
The biographical background
of the author, including where they were born, their education, and the
historical events that influenced their writing |
[ ] |
|
C |
The organizational
structure the author chose, including whether they used chronological order,
cause/effect, or compare/contrast |
[ ] |
|
D |
The vocabulary level an
author uses, which determines the difficulty of the text and the appropriate
grade level |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
CHALLENGE
BOSS 2 Word:
CENTRAL IDEA
|
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level): The Word Lich unleashed his
final challenge. On an obsidian plinth appeared a glowing scroll:
"Inexperienced readers confuse plot summary with deeper understanding.
They say 'this article was about penguins' when what they should say is:
'this article argued that penguins demonstrate remarkable adaptive
intelligence, suggesting that survival depends not on physical strength but
on behavioral flexibility.' The first is a TOPIC. The second is the HEART of
what the text is really saying — the controlling idea that all the evidence,
examples, and details in the text are working together to support and
develop." |
QUESTION: Based on the Lich's explanation, which of the
following MOST accurately defines central idea in a nonfiction text?
|
A |
The topic or subject that a
text is about, usually expressed as a single word or short phrase |
[ ] |
|
B |
The most important point an
author makes about the topic, expressed as a complete idea that all the
text's details work to support |
[ ] |
|
C |
A quotation from an expert
source included to make the author's argument seem more believable |
[ ] |
|
D |
The final paragraph of a
text in which the author summarizes the main points and restates the thesis |
[ ] |
|
My Answer: _____ HP Lost (wrong answers x 5): _____ Treasure Earned: |
|
🏆 VICTORY! THE DUNGEON
IS CONQUERED! 🏆 Scholar Rank Guide: 18/18
correct = MASTER WORDSMITH — STAAR Ready! 15-17
correct = SCHOLAR CHAMPION — Nearly There! 11-14
correct = JOURNEYMAN READER — Keep Practicing! Below 11 correct =
APPRENTICE — Study Part 1 and Play Again! |
|
PART 3 — COMPLETE ANSWER KEY All 18 Campaign Questions |
Correct Answers | Full Explanations |
Etymologies |
ROOM I: THE ENCHANTED HALLWAY
|
Q1: ALLITERATION Correct Answer: A Explanation: Alliteration
repeats the SAME initial CONSONANT sound in nearby words. "Bold, brutal,
and bloodthirsty beyond belief" — every stressed word begins with /b/.
Choice B is onomatopoeia (sound-imitating words). Choice C is simile. Choice
D is assonance (repeated vowel sounds). Etymology:
Latin: ad- (to) +
littera (letter). Root littera = letter/writing. Related: literature,
literal, literate, illiterate. |
|
Q2: ANTECEDENT Correct Answer: A Explanation: Antecedent =
the noun a pronoun refers back to. In "The dragon guards its
treasure," "dragon" is the antecedent of "its."
Every pronoun must have a clear antecedent or the sentence becomes ambiguous.
Choice B = apostrophe. Choice C = compound sentence. Choice D is unrelated. Etymology:
Latin: ante- (before)
+ cedere (to go). Related: precede, concede, ancestor, antebellum, recede,
procedure. |
|
Q3: FORESHADOWING Correct Answer: C Explanation: Foreshadowing
= early hints that suggest later events. The mosaic showing a fallen hero,
broken sword, and raven BEFORE the story's end is a classic example. Choice A
= theme. Choice B = flashback (going BACK in time, not forward). Choice D =
climax. Etymology:
Old English: fore-
(before) + sceadwian (to shadow). Related: forecast, foresee, foreword,
forewarn, forestall. |
ROOM II: THE CRYPT OF ECHOES
|
Q4: CONNOTATION Correct Answer: B Explanation: Connotation =
emotional associations beyond literal meaning. "Warrior,"
"thug," and "soldier" all mean armed person (denotation)
but carry different feelings. "Warrior" = heroic, "thug"
= criminal, "soldier" = formal. Choice A = denotation. Etymology:
Latin: con-
(together) + notare (to mark). Related: notation, notable, annotate, denote,
connotation. |
|
Q5: TONE Correct Answer: B Explanation: Tone = the
AUTHOR'S attitude toward the subject, revealed through word choice. Mood
(Choice A) = what the READER feels. The mayor's tone is grief-stricken; the
enemy's tone is dismissive — same facts, completely different authorial
attitudes. Etymology:
Greek: tonos
(stretch/sound) → Latin: tonus. Related: intonation, monotone, tonal,
overtone, atone. |
|
Q6: SYMBOLISM Correct Answer: C Explanation: Symbolism =
using objects, characters, or actions to represent larger ideas. The dove =
peace; the skull under a crown = death of power; the broken chain = freedom.
Symbols work because cultural associations have built up over centuries.
Choice A = simile. Choice D = alliteration. Etymology:
Greek: symbolon
(thrown together) from syn- (together) + ballein (to throw). Related: symbol,
symbolic, emblem. |
ROOM III: THE FORBIDDEN LIBRARY
|
Q7: INFERENCE Correct Answer: B Explanation: Inference =
"reading between the lines." The text shows coat-pulling,
frost-checking, and fire-approaching — the reader INFERS cold. The word
"cold" never appears. You combine text evidence with prior
knowledge. Choice A = quoting. Choice C = hyperbole. Choice D = explicit main
idea. Etymology:
Latin: in- (into) +
ferre (to carry). Root ferre = to bear/carry. Related: transfer, refer,
defer, conference, fertile. |
|
Q8: FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE Correct Answer: C Explanation: Figurative
language = non-literal language for artistic effect. "The moon was a
ghostly galleon" is a metaphor — the moon is NOT a ship. Figurative
language appears in poetry, fiction, AND nonfiction/persuasive writing.
Choice A is too narrow. Choice D is false. Etymology:
Latin: figura (form)
from fingere (to shape/fashion). Related: figure, figment, configuration,
disfigure, transfigure. |
|
Q9: METAPHOR vs. SIMILE Correct Answer: B Explanation: Metaphor:
"Life IS a journey" — direct equation, no connecting word. Simile:
"Life is LIKE a journey" — uses "like" or "as."
Choice A has them reversed. Both appear in all genres, not just poetry. A
simile is not limited to real things. Etymology:
Metaphor: Greek meta-
(across) + pherein (to carry). Simile: Latin similis (like/similar). Related:
similar, simulate, assimilate. |
ROOM IV: THE BEAST'S LAIR
|
Q10: PROTAGONIST Correct Answer: B Explanation: Protagonist =
the CENTRAL character who drives the action. NOT always the hero — just the
primary figure we follow. The antagonist (Choice D) OPPOSES the protagonist.
A narrator (Choice A) tells the story; a protagonist lives it. Etymology:
Greek: proto- (first)
+ agonistes (actor/contestant). Related: protocol, prototype, proton,
antagonist (anti- = against). |
|
Q11: THEME Correct Answer: B Explanation: Theme = the
universal truth or message about human experience — NOT the plot (Choice A),
NOT the setting (Choice C), NOT imagery (Choice D). Theme is a COMPLETE
STATEMENT: not just "friendship" but "True friendship requires
sacrifice even when it is painful." Etymology:
Greek: tithenai (to
place/set) → thema (something set down). Related: thesis, synthesis,
antithesis, epithet, theme. |
|
Q12: CONFLICT Correct Answer: B Explanation: Internal
conflict = struggle WITHIN a character's own mind (character vs. self).
External conflict = struggle against an OUTSIDE force: person, nature,
society, fate. Choice A incorrectly defines internal conflict. Choices C and
D are false — both types appear throughout stories. Etymology:
Latin: con-
(together) + flictus (struck). Root fligere = to strike. Related: inflict,
afflict, friction, profligate. |
ROOM V: THE FORGE OF FLAMES
|
Q13: CONTEXT CLUES Correct Answer: B Explanation: Context clues
= hints IN the surrounding text. "Could speak for hours without
stopping" and "filling every silence with words" reveal
loquacious = very talkative. Choice D describes morphology
(prefixes/suffixes) — a related but different vocabulary strategy. Etymology:
Latin: contextus
(connection) from con- (together) + texere (to weave). Related: text,
textile, texture, context, pretext. |
|
Q14: HYPERBOLE Correct Answer: B Explanation: Hyperbole =
wild exaggeration for effect, not literal truth. "Eat an entire
kingdom" is physically impossible — it expresses extreme hunger
humorously. Key test: Is it physically impossible AND used for emphasis? Then
it's hyperbole. Hyper- = over/excessive in Greek. Etymology:
Greek: hyper-
(over/beyond) + ballein (to throw). Related: hyperactive, hyperlink,
hyperbole. Ballein also source of: ballistic, symbol, problem. |
|
Q15: DICTION Correct Answer: B Explanation: Diction = the
DELIBERATE CHOICE of words. Same storm described with "Rain fell"
vs. "The heavens shattered open in a cascade of silver fury" — the
second uses precise, vivid, elevated diction. Word choice controls everything
the reader experiences. Etymology:
Latin: dictio (act of
saying) from dicere (to say). Related: dictate, dictionary, predict,
contradict, verdict, diction. |
ROOM VI: THE THRONE ROOM
|
Q16: POINT OF VIEW Correct Answer: B Explanation: Point of View
= the perspective from which the story is told. 1st person (I) = narrator
participates. 2nd person (you) = reader as character. 3rd person limited =
outside narrator, one character's thoughts. 3rd person omniscient = all
characters' thoughts known. Etymology:
Latin: punctum
(point) + videre (to see). Related: video, vision, evident, supervise,
provide, visible, revise. |
|
Q17: TEXT STRUCTURE Correct Answer: B Explanation: Text structure
= the organizational BLUEPRINT of a piece. Five main types: Chronological,
Cause/Effect, Compare/Contrast, Problem/Solution, Description. Signal words
identify structure: "however" = compare/contrast; "as a
result" = cause/effect; "first, then" = chronological. Etymology:
Latin: structura
(building) from struere (to build/pile). Related: construct, instruct,
obstruct, destroy, infrastructure, structure. |
|
Q18: CLAIM & EVIDENCE Correct Answer: B Explanation: Claim = the
central assertion (what the writer is arguing is true). Evidence = facts,
data, quotes, or examples that PROVE the claim. A strong argument also
addresses counterclaims. Choice A reverses the definitions. Choices C and D
are factually incorrect. Etymology:
Latin: clamare (to
shout/declare). Related: exclaim, proclaim, reclaim, acclaim, declaim,
clamor. Evidence: Latin evidentia from videre (to see). |
FINAL BOSS: THE WORD LICH
|
BOSS 1: AUTHOR'S PURPOSE Correct Answer: A Explanation: Author's
Purpose = PIE: Persuade, Inform, Entertain. P = change behavior/beliefs. I =
teach facts/concepts. E = engage through story/humor. The ad = persuade. The
literary sentence = entertain. The biology fact = inform. All three must be
known for STAAR. Etymology:
Latin: auctor
(creator) from augere (to originate/increase). Related: authority, auction,
augment, august, author, authorize. |
|
BOSS 2: CENTRAL IDEA Correct Answer: B Explanation: Central Idea
is NOT the same as Topic. Topic = "penguins" (one word). Central
Idea = the complete CLAIM about the topic: "Penguins demonstrate
remarkable adaptive intelligence." It is always a COMPLETE SENTENCE that
makes a CLAIM. All supporting details point to it. Etymology:
Latin: centralis from
centrum (midpoint) + Greek: idea (form/concept). Centrum from Greek kentron
(sharp point, center of circle). Related: central, concentrate, eccentric. |
|
FOLLOW-UP
ACTIVITY IDEAS 1.
Flash Cards — Word on front; definition, example sentence, and etymology on
back. 2.
Root Word Web — Pick any root from Section D and brainstorm 5+ related words. 3.
Text Hunt — Find 2 examples of each literary device in your current
independent reading book. 4.
Author's Chair — Write a short story that deliberately uses 8 of the 14
literary devices. Label each one in the margin. 5.
STAAR Practice — Use the Quick Reference charts on pages 3-4 before every
practice test. Reading Sage Blog by Taylor |
STAAR ELA Prep | 6th Grade Advanced Study Guide |
Tier 3 Academic Vocabulary |
Reading Sage |
readingsage.com | By Taylor
THE DUNGEON OF LOST WORDS
VOLUME II -- THE SECOND EXPEDITION
6th Grade Vocabulary
Quest |
18 New Questions | STAAR ELA Aligned
________________________________________
WHAT IS NEW IN VOLUME II
This campaign covers 18 brand-new vocabulary words not tested
in Volume I. Reading passages are written at a 7th-8th grade level. All words
are Tier 3 academic ELA vocabulary aligned to STAAR ELA standards.
NEW WORDS COVERED:
irony, mood, denotation, flashback, exposition, rising action,
falling action, stanza, rhyme scheme, onomatopoeia, assonance, motif,
characterization, genre, paraphrase, summarize, objective summary, thesis,
resolution, personification, imagery
________________________________________
CHARACTER SHEET
Name: ________________________________ Class: Word Scholar
Starting HP: 20 | Current HP: _____ |
Questions Correct: _____ / 18
| Mistakes: _____
HP TRACKER -- Cross out a heart for every wrong answer (-5
HP each):
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
(20 hearts = 20 HP.
Each wrong answer = cross out one heart = lose 5 HP.)
________________________________________
ROOM I: THE HALL OF
MIRRORS
READ ALOUD:
You enter the Hall of Mirrors -- but these are no ordinary
mirrors. Each one shows a slightly different version of the same scene,
distorted and twisted. Laughter echoes from one mirror; the next shows that
same laughter replaced by tears. A voice reverberates: "Nothing is ever
quite what it appears to be, young Scholar. Those who understand the difference
between surface and truth survive. The rest are trapped here forever,
confused."
HOW TO PLAY THIS ROOM:
Read each passage carefully. Circle or write your answer (A,
B, C, or D). Wrong answers cost 5 HP -- erase and try again, but mark each
mistake. Correct answers earn treasure. Proceed to the next room only after
completing all three challenges.
CHALLENGE 1 --
WORD: IRONY
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
In the Hall of Mirrors, you discover a journal left by a
previous adventurer who failed. Her final entry described three events: first,
a fire station that burned to the ground because no one called for help;
second, a grammar teacher who could not write a complete sentence; third, a
story in which a detective investigating crimes was later revealed to have
committed the very crime she was solving. In each case, the adventurer noted,
the actual outcome was dramatically different from what any reasonable person
would have expected. "The universe," she wrote, "seems to enjoy
these contradictions. They feel almost deliberate. The smarter the reader, the
more they notice these painful, perfect mismatches between expectation and
reality."
QUESTION: Based
on the journal's three examples, which of the following BEST defines irony as a
literary device?
A. A figure of
speech that uses the words "like" or "as" to compare two
unlike things in order to create a vivid mental image
B. A narrative
technique in which the story's timeline is interrupted so the reader can see a
scene from before the story began
C. A literary
device in which there is a contradiction between what is expected and what
actually occurs, or between what is said and what is meant
D. The central
message or universal truth about human experience that an author communicates
through an entire literary work
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 2 --
WORD: MOOD
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
You move deeper into the hall. The passages grow narrower, the
torches dimmer, and the air heavier -- thick with the smell of mildew and old
stone. The mirrors show faces you do not recognize, watching you. The drip of
unseen water marks the seconds. Your footsteps sound too loud. Each shadow
seems to lean toward you. A scholar's placard on the wall reads: "Notice
what you feel right now as a reader. The author of this hall did not stumble
upon this feeling accidentally. Every detail -- the smell, the sound, the
light, the silence -- was chosen to produce exactly one specific emotional
response in you. That emotional response, created deliberately by the author's
choices, has a precise name in literary study."
QUESTION: Based
on the passage and the placard, which of the following BEST defines mood in a
literary text?
A. The author's
attitude toward the subject or audience, as revealed through word choice and
writing style
B. The sequence
of events in a story from exposition through rising action, climax, falling
action, and resolution
C. The feeling
or atmosphere that a writer creates for the reader through descriptive details,
setting, and word choice
D. A comparison
between two unlike things that does not use the connecting words
"like" or "as"
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 3 --
WORD: DENOTATION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The third mirror in the hall showed two identical images side
by side: both labeled "home." The first image glowed warmly -- a fire
crackling, people laughing, a dog curled on a rug. The second image was stark
and clinical -- a building, walls, a roof, an address number on a mailbox. A
scrolled note beneath the mirrors read: "The images you see here represent
the same word split in two. One shows all the feelings and memories that
surround a word after years of human use. The other shows only what a dictionary
would say: the precise, factual, objective meaning. A careful reader must
always know which kind of meaning is at work in the text -- and these two types
of meaning have different names."
QUESTION: Based
on the mirror images and the scrolled note, which of the following BEST defines
denotation?
A. The emotional
associations, cultural feelings, and personal memories that a word suggests
beyond its objective meaning
B. The literal,
dictionary definition of a word -- its objective, factual meaning stripped of
all emotional associations
C. The
repetition of the same initial consonant sound at the beginning of two or more
nearby words
D. The
perspective from which a story is narrated, including the narrator's level of
knowledge about events and characters
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM I COMPLETE!
If you answered all three correctly: check off your treasures
(Glass of Irony, Shadow Lantern, Dictionary Stone) and proceed to Room II!
ROOM II: THE CLOCKWORK
CATACOMBS
READ ALOUD:
Enormous brass gears turn in the walls. Clocks of every size
tick and chime at different intervals. The floor is a mosaic of hourglasses,
calendars, and timelines. A mechanical automaton in the shape of a robed
scholar points at a golden door. "Time is the enemy of the unprepared
reader," it announces in a grinding voice. "Here in the Clockwork
Catacombs, everything depends on understanding where you are in a story's
structure -- and what role each moment plays."
CHALLENGE 4 --
WORD: FLASHBACK
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
In the first chamber, a mechanical display shows a novel open
to chapter fourteen. A brass plaque explains: "The hero is in the middle
of a battle. But suddenly -- without warning -- the story leaves the battle
entirely. We find ourselves watching the hero as a ten-year-old child, standing
in her father's study, being told her mother has died. Then, just as abruptly,
we are back on the battlefield. The author did not do this by accident. This
structural technique -- interrupting the forward movement of the story to show
something that happened before the story's present timeline -- gives the reader
the emotional key needed to understand WHY the hero fights so
desperately."
QUESTION: Based
on the brass plaque's explanation, which of the following BEST defines
flashback as a narrative device?
A. A hint or
clue placed early in the story that suggests what will happen later in the
narrative
B. The author's
decision to tell the story from the perspective of a character rather than an
outside narrator
C. An
interruption in the story's chronological order that takes the reader back to
an earlier event to reveal important background
D. The moment of
highest tension in a story after which events begin to move toward resolution
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 5 --
WORD: EXPOSITION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The second chamber holds a mechanical theater. The curtain
rises on the very first scene of a play. The stage fills with a detailed
backdrop of a seaside village in 1850. Two characters appear -- a fisherman and
his teenage daughter -- and begin speaking naturally, revealing who they are,
what their lives are like, and that a great storm has been approaching for
days. A scholar's note reads: "No story drops readers into the middle of
the action without any orientation. Every well-crafted narrative begins with a
period of orientation -- the author carefully lays out the foundation before
anything dramatic happens. This opening section has a specific name in the
structure of narrative."
QUESTION: Based
on the mechanical theater passage, which of the following BEST defines
exposition in a narrative?
A. The turning
point of the story -- the moment of highest tension from which the plot begins
to resolve
B. The
background information presented at the beginning of a narrative that
introduces the setting, characters, and situation
C. A recurring
element such as an image or symbol that appears throughout a work and carries
thematic meaning
D. Events
following the climax that tie up loose ends and move the story toward its final
resolution
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 6 --
WORD: RISING ACTION AND FALLING ACTION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The walls of the final chamber are covered with a single
enormous diagram: a mountain-shaped plot structure. At the base is a quiet
village. Climbing the mountain's left side, each step shows growing danger -- a
theft, a chase, a capture, a failed escape, a second capture. At the mountain's
peak, a confrontation. Then the right side descends -- the villain is exposed,
allies regroup, wounds are tended. At the base of the right side, peace. A
mechanical voice explains: "Every event on the left side of the mountain
INCREASES tension. Every event on the right side RELEASES it. Both matter
equally. Neither can be skipped. And each section has its own precise
name."
QUESTION: Based
on the mountain diagram, which of the following BEST distinguishes rising
action from falling action?
A. Rising action
is the author's introduction of characters and setting, while falling action is
when the main conflict is first introduced
B. Rising action
consists of events that build tension and complications leading toward the
climax, while falling action consists of events after the climax that decrease
tension and lead toward resolution
C. Rising action
always involves external conflict between characters, while falling action
always involves only internal conflict
D. Rising action
occurs only in the first half of a story, while falling action occurs only in
the story's final chapter
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM II COMPLETE!
Treasures: Gear of Flashback, Hourglass of Exposition,
Pendulum of Structure. Proceed to Room III!
ROOM III: THE POET'S
GARDEN
READ ALOUD:
You step through a stone archway into an underground garden
blooming with impossible flowers -- each petal inscribed with a word, each stem
a line of verse. The air hums with the sounds of distant music. Fireflies spell
out couplets in the darkness. A ghostly poet in ink-stained robes glides toward
you. "Ah," she sighs, "a scholar who enters the garden of verse.
Let us discover whether you truly understand how poetry is built -- its
structures, its sounds, its silences."
CHALLENGE 7 --
WORD: STANZA
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The ghostly poet hands you an anthology and opens to a poem
about the ocean. The poem has four distinct sections, each separated by a line
of white space. The first section describes dawn on the water. The second
describes a storm. The third describes a shipwreck. The fourth describes
survivors on shore. Each section contains exactly six lines. The poet explains:
"A poem is not one unbroken wall of words. It is built in units that
function like rooms -- each containing a specific idea or image, separated from
the next by white space the way a paragraph is separated by indentation. These
structural units are the most basic architectural element of almost all formal
poetry, and they have a specific name."
QUESTION: Based
on the poet's explanation and the ocean poem, which of the following BEST
defines stanza?
A. A single row
of words in a poem, ending wherever the poet decides rather than at the end of
a sentence
B. A grouped set
of lines in a poem that functions like a paragraph -- a unit separated from
others by white space
C. A pattern of
rhyming sounds at the ends of lines, labeled with letters to show which lines
rhyme with each other
D. Two
consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme with each other and together form a
complete thought
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 8 --
WORD: RHYME SCHEME
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The poet shows you two poems. In the first, lines 1 and 3
share an ending sound, and lines 2 and 4 share a different ending sound -- she
labels this ABAB. In the second poem, every pair of consecutive lines rhymes --
she labels this AABB. "Notice," she says, "that we are not
labeling the actual rhyming words -- we are labeling the PATTERN they create.
The same letter means the same sound. A new letter means a new sound. This
system allows any reader to describe and discuss the architecture of a poem's
sound without having to quote the poem itself. It is the blueprint of the
poem's music."
QUESTION: Based
on the poet's explanation, which of the following BEST defines rhyme scheme?
A. The regular
pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry that creates a
rhythmic beat
B. The use of
words whose sounds imitate the things they describe, such as "hiss,"
"buzz," or "crackle"
C. The pattern
of rhyming sounds at the ends of lines in a poem, recorded using letters to
show which lines share ending sounds
D. The
repetition of vowel sounds in the middle of nearby words, creating a musical
internal echo
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 9 --
WORD: ONOMATOPOEIA
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The poet leads you to a section of the garden where the
inscribed petals all contain unusual words: CRASH, HISS, BUZZ, SIZZLE, CLANG,
MURMUR, GURGLE, WHISPER, THUD, CRACKLE. She touches each petal and the actual
sound erupts in the air. "Language is magical in this way," she says.
"Most words are arbitrary -- there is no reason the concept of a dog
should be called 'dog.' But some words are not arbitrary at all. Some words
carry the very sound of the thing they describe inside their own pronunciation.
When you say the word, you make the sound. They are their own definition. They
are their own performance. This is one of poetry's most delightful
devices."
QUESTION: Based
on the poet's explanation and the inscribed petals, which of the following BEST
defines onomatopoeia?
A. The
repetition of the same initial consonant sound in two or more nearby words to
create rhythm or emphasis
B. A word that
phonetically imitates or resembles the actual sound of the thing or action it
describes
C. A comparison
between two unlike things that uses the connecting words "like" or
"as"
D. The emotional
feeling or atmosphere that a piece of writing creates in the reader through its
details and language
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM III COMPLETE!
Treasures: Quill of Sound, Stanza Stone, Pattern Map. Proceed
to Room IV!
ROOM IV: THE ECHO
CHAMBER
READ ALOUD:
Every sound you make repeats -- once, twice, seven times,
fading differently each echo. The walls are inscribed with the same phrases
over and over, growing slightly different with each repetition. A voice calls
out: "Repetition is not mistake -- it is meaning. Patterns are not
coincidence -- they are craft. The scholar who ignores what recurs will miss
everything the author truly cared about."
CHALLENGE 10 --
WORD: ASSONANCE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
A stone tablet bears a poem with certain vowel sounds
highlighted in gold: "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain."
The /ay/ sound recurs -- not at the ends of the lines (which would be rhyme)
but inside the words, threading through the line like a musical chord. Another
example: "Hear the mellow wedding bells." The repeated /e/ sound
connects the words musically without any of them sharing ending sounds. A
scholar's note explains: "This is one of poetry's most subtle musical
devices -- using the repetition of internal vowel sounds to create a singing
quality that holds a line of poetry together. It is different from rhyme, which
repeats ending sounds, and different from alliteration, which repeats starting
consonant sounds."
QUESTION: Based
on the examples and the scholar's note, which of the following BEST defines
assonance?
A. The
repetition of the same initial consonant sound at the beginning of two or more
nearby words
B. A word that
phonetically imitates the actual sound of the thing it is describing
C. The
repetition of similar vowel sounds in the middle of or throughout nearby words,
creating an internal musical echo
D. A pattern of
rhyming sounds at the ends of poetic lines, recorded with letter labels
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 11 --
WORD: MOTIF
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
You discover a novel left open in the Echo Chamber. A scholar
has highlighted every appearance of a specific image: a locked door. The door
appears on page 3 when the character cannot enter her father's study. It
appears on page 47 when she is turned away from a university. It appears on
page 112 when she cannot get a loan. It appears on page 198 when she finally --
for the first time -- opens a door herself and walks through. A note reads:
"This image was not chosen accidentally. When a detail recurs this deliberately,
it is not merely setting or decoration. It is the author's way of building the
theme one brick at a time -- and it has a specific literary name."
QUESTION: Based
on the scholar's annotations and the recurring door image, which of the
following BEST defines motif?
A. The central
message or universal insight about human experience that an author communicates
through an entire literary work
B. A recurring
element -- image, symbol, phrase, or idea -- that appears throughout a work and
accumulates thematic significance with each repetition
C. The author's
deliberate word choice, including considerations of formality, specificity, and
emotional effect on the reader
D. Hints or
clues placed early in the text that suggest what events will happen later in
the story
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 12 --
WORD: CHARACTERIZATION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The final inscription in the Echo Chamber compares two methods
a writer uses to reveal who a character truly is. The first method is direct:
"Marcus was selfish and ambitious." The second method is indirect:
Marcus speaks rudely to a servant, takes credit for his partner's work, and
lies about his age when applying for a job. A scholar's annotation reads:
"The first method tells you. The second method SHOWS you. Both create
character in the reader's mind -- but they use entirely different mechanics.
The craft of building a character in a reader's imagination -- through any
combination of appearance, speech, actions, thoughts, and others' reactions --
is one of a novelist's most essential skills and has a specific name."
QUESTION: Based
on the scholarly guide and the examples of Marcus, which of the following BEST
defines characterization?
A. The time and
place in which a story takes place, including the historical period and the
specific geographic location
B. The struggle
between opposing forces in a narrative, which may be internal or external
C. The methods
an author uses to develop and reveal a character's personality through
appearance, dialogue, actions, thoughts, and others' reactions
D. The
perspective from which a story is narrated, including how much the narrator
knows about events and characters
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM IV COMPLETE!
Treasures: Assonance Bell, Motif Compass, Character Mirror.
Proceed to Room V!
ROOM V: THE ARCHIVE OF
GENRES
READ ALOUD:
The Archive is enormous -- shelves stretching in every
direction, organized by category. One section glows gold: stories of the
fantastic. Another glows silver: accounts of true events. A third glows red:
works meant to be performed on stage. A fourth glows blue: short compressed
language arranged in lines and stanzas. A robed archivist approaches:
"Every text belongs to a family. Know the family, and you know what to
expect -- and when to be surprised."
CHALLENGE 13 --
WORD: GENRE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The archivist sets four books before you. The first is a novel
about a teenager who discovers she can control weather -- it features invented
worlds and impossible events. The second is an autobiography written by a civil
rights leader about her actual life. The third is a script with stage
directions, acts, scenes, and dialogue meant to be performed by actors. The
fourth contains sonnets, haikus, and free verse arranged in stanzas. The
archivist taps each book: "Each of these belongs to a different family of
literature -- not because of its quality or its topic, but because of its
fundamental form, structure, and conventions. Readers approach each family with
different expectations."
QUESTION: Based
on the archivist's explanation and the four books, which of the following BEST
defines genre in literature?
A. The central
message or universal truth that all works of literature share, regardless of
their structure or form
B. The
difficulty level of a text, determined by sentence length, vocabulary
complexity, and maturity of themes
C. A category of
literature defined by its shared conventions, structure, and form -- such as
fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama
D. The author's
attitude toward the subject or audience as revealed through word choice and
writing style
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 14 --
WORD: PARAPHRASE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
At a scholar's workstation, you find two versions of the same
passage. The original reads: "The aggregate of our joy and suffering,
thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every
hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of
civilization has lived there -- on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam."
The second version reads: "All of human history -- every belief system,
every leader, every achievement and failure -- has taken place on our tiny
planet, which is just a speck floating in the vast darkness of space." A
note reads: "The second version communicates the original idea without
copying any of its language. This is a specific academic writing skill."
QUESTION: Based
on the two versions and the workstation note, which of the following BEST
defines paraphrase?
A. A brief,
objective restatement of only the most important points, significantly shorter
than the original
B. A
word-for-word quotation of the original text, placed in quotation marks and
attributed to the source
C. Restating the
meaning of a passage in your own words and sentence structure while preserving
the original meaning
D. Identifying
and listing the central idea and supporting details without reading the full
text
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 15 --
WORD: SUMMARIZE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
At the Archive exit, a mechanical scholar presents two student
responses to the same article about climate change. Student A wrote: "The
article says that global temperatures have risen 1.1 degrees Celsius since
1850, that the 2010s were the hottest decade on record, that sea levels are
rising at 3.3 millimeters per year, that Arctic ice is melting, that coral
reefs are bleaching, that extreme weather events are more frequent, and that
scientists say we need to reduce emissions by 45% by 2030." Student B wrote:
"The article argues that climate change is accelerating and that immediate
global action is needed to prevent severe environmental consequences." The
mechanical scholar nods at Student B: "This is the skill."
QUESTION: Based
on the mechanical scholar's response, which of the following BEST defines
summarize?
A. To restate an
entire passage in different words, including all specific details, statistics,
and examples from the original
B. To provide a
brief, objective statement of a text's main points -- capturing essential ideas
without including every detail
C. To evaluate
the quality and credibility of a text's argument by examining its evidence and
reasoning
D. To identify
the author's purpose by determining whether the text is meant to persuade,
inform, or entertain
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM V COMPLETE!
Treasures: Genre Compass, Scholar's Quill, Crystal of Summary.
Proceed to Room VI!
ROOM VI: THE TRIBUNAL
OF TRUTH
READ ALOUD:
Three ancient judges sit behind a curved stone bench, their
faces concealed by deep hoods. Each holds a scale. Before them: stacks of
essays, arguments, and reports. "Truth is not simply stating what you
believe," the central judge intones. "Truth in writing must be
constructed -- built from evidence, organized by logic, grounded in honesty.
Answer our challenges and you earn passage to the Word Lich. Fail, and your
arguments are worthless."
CHALLENGE 16 --
WORD: OBJECTIVE SUMMARY
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The first judge slides a newspaper article across the bench --
an account of a controversial new school policy. Then she slides five student
summaries. The first begins: "This terrible policy will ruin
education." The second says: "I personally think the principal is
wrong." The third says: "According to the article, the new policy
requires students to wear uniforms, eliminates elective classes, and extends
the school day by 45 minutes. Supporters cited improved focus; critics cited
loss of creative expression." The fourth copies full paragraphs
word-for-word. The fifth uses only first-person opinions. The judge taps the
third summary: "Only one of these is acceptable in academic writing. Name
what makes the third one correct."
QUESTION: Based
on the judge's assessment, which of the following BEST defines an objective
summary?
A. A summary
that agrees with the author's main argument and adds the reader's own
supporting evidence
B. A
word-for-word restatement of the text's most important sentences placed in
quotation marks
C. A concise,
unbiased restatement of a text's main ideas written in third person, without
personal opinion or judgment
D. A detailed
list of every fact, statistic, and example mentioned in the text, presented in
the order they appear
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 17 --
WORD: THESIS
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The second judge presents two essays on whether schools should
require community service hours for graduation. The first essay begins:
"Community service is good. In this essay I will talk about community
service." The second essay begins: "Requiring forty hours of
community service for graduation develops civic responsibility, builds
professional skills, and strengthens the relationship between schools and local
communities." The judge explains: "The first writer has given us a
topic. The second writer has given us a CONTROLLING IDEA -- a complete,
arguable, specific statement that tells the reader exactly what the essay will
prove and how it will be organized. Every paragraph of a strong essay points
back to this single statement."
QUESTION: Based
on the judge's explanation and the two essay openings, which of the following
BEST defines a thesis?
A. The topic
sentence that begins each body paragraph and connects back to the central
argument of the essay
B. The central
argument or controlling idea of an essay -- a complete, specific, arguable
statement that the essay develops and supports
C. A brief
statement of background information that gives the reader context before the
argument is introduced
D. The
concluding sentence of an essay in which the writer summarizes the main points
and restates the argument
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 18 --
WORD: RESOLUTION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The third judge presents a narrative summary. After 400 pages
of pursuit, betrayal, love, and loss, the novel's warring factions finally meet
in a burned-out cathedral. The hero and the villain recognize each other as
brothers separated in childhood. The stolen lands are returned. The people
displaced by war begin to go home. The wounds are not fully healed -- one
brother has lost his sight, and a beloved character did not survive -- but the
central struggle that has driven the entire story has finally reached its
conclusion. Life continues: imperfect, ongoing, but no longer broken by the
central conflict.
QUESTION: Based
on the novel summary, which of the following BEST defines resolution in a
narrative?
A. The turning
point of the story -- the moment of highest tension from which all subsequent
events flow
B. The opening
section of a narrative that introduces the main characters, setting, and
background situation
C. The
conclusion of a narrative in which the central conflict is resolved or
addressed and the story reaches its end
D. The series of
complications and events that build tension and lead toward the story's climax
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM VI COMPLETE!
Treasures: Scale of Truth, Thesis Scroll, Resolution Key.
PREPARE FOR THE FINAL BOSS!
*** FINAL BOSS: THE
WORD LICH -- REBORN ***
READ ALOUD:
The Word Lich rises again -- reconstructed from fragments of
stolen language. He is smaller this time, but no less dangerous. Two dark
flames burn in his eye sockets. "You defeated me before," he rasps,
"but there is more to language than what you have learned. These two final
challenges draw from the deepest wells of literary knowledge. Prove you have
truly mastered the vocabulary of reading -- or be consumed by what you cannot
name."
CHALLENGE BOSS 1 --
WORD: PERSONIFICATION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The Word Lich unfurls a scroll with five passages. In the
first: "The old oak tree stretched its arms toward the sun, yearning for
warmth." In the second: "The city never sleeps -- it paces its
streets all night, restless and muttering." In the third: "The wind
screamed its fury as the hurricane made landfall." In the fourth:
"Time waits for no one." In the fifth: "The moon watched over
the sleeping village with quiet, maternal patience." In each case, the
Lich points out, an entity that cannot speak, feel, sleep, watch, or yearn is
described as if it can. The Lich snaps the scroll shut: "What single
literary term names this technique across all five examples?"
QUESTION: Based
on the five examples on the scroll, which of the following BEST defines
personification?
A. A direct
comparison between two unlike things stating that one thing IS another, without
using "like" or "as"
B. An extreme
exaggeration used for emphasis or comic effect that is not meant to be taken
literally
C. A figure of
speech that gives human qualities, emotions, or behaviors to non-human objects,
animals, or abstract concepts
D. The use of
objects or actions to represent larger ideas or abstract concepts beyond their
literal meaning
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE BOSS 2 --
WORD: IMAGERY
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
For his final challenge, the Word Lich conjures a passage:
"The market smelled of cardamom and fish and old wood soaked in decades of
rain. The vendor's voice rose and fell like a tide, calling prices in three
languages. Children wove between the stalls like bright fish through coral. The
mango slices, cold and dripping, tasted of sweetness cut with something almost
sour -- the way happiness always seems to carry its own small shadow." The
Lich folds his bony hands: "Every sense. Every texture. Every flavor and
smell. The author did not TELL you this market was vivid. The author BUILT the
market inside your imagination. Name the technique."
QUESTION: Based
on the market passage and the Word Lich's explanation, which of the following
BEST defines imagery in literature?
A. A figure of
speech in which the author gives human characteristics to non-human things to
make them seem more relatable
B. The author's
deliberate word choice -- including formality, precision, and emotional weight
-- that shapes the reader's experience
C. Language that
appeals to one or more of the five senses -- sight, sound, touch, taste, and
smell -- to create a vivid mental experience
D. A comparison
between two unlike things using the connecting words "like" or
"as" to highlight a specific shared quality
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
*** VICTORY! THE WORD LICH IS DEFEATED AGAIN! ***
SCHOLAR RANK GUIDE:
18/18 correct = GRAND MASTER WORDSMITH -- Advanced STAAR
Ready!
15-17 correct = SCHOLAR CHAMPION -- Strong Performance!
11-14 correct = JOURNEYMAN READER -- Review the Answer Key
and Try Again!
Below 11 = APPRENTICE -- Study the vocabulary list and
play again!
COMPLETE ANSWER KEY --
VOLUME II
For teacher/parent use, or read after completing the campaign.
IMPORTANT NOTE FOR STUDENTS:
Do not read this section until you have completed all 18
challenges! The answer key also includes the EXPLANATION for each answer and
the ETYMOLOGY (word origin) to help you remember every word.
________________________________________
ROOM I: THE HALL OF
MIRRORS
Q1: IRONY
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Irony = a contradiction between
expectation and reality. The fire station burning (expected to be safe), the
grammar teacher who cannot write (expected to have expertise), and the
detective who committed the crime (expected to be on the right side) are all
examples of SITUATIONAL irony. Choice A = simile. Choice B = flashback. Choice
D = theme.
Etymology: Greek: eirōneia (dissembling / pretending
not to know). Related: ironic, ironically. The original Greek sense was a
speaker who said less than they meant to trick others.
________________________________________
Q2: MOOD
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Mood = the feeling the READER experiences,
created by the author's deliberate choices. The narrowing passages, dimming
torches, mildew smell, watching faces, and echoing footsteps all build dread in
the reader. TONE (Choice A) = the AUTHOR'S attitude. Mood is what the reader
feels; tone is the author's attitude. Choice B = plot. Choice D = metaphor.
Etymology: Old English: mod (mind, spirit, feeling).
Related: moody, gloomy. Note the crucial distinction: mood = reader experience;
tone = author attitude.
________________________________________
Q3: DENOTATION
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Denotation = the literal, factual,
dictionary meaning of a word. The clinical image of a building with walls and a
roof = the denotation of "home." The warm fire, laughing people, and
cozy dog = the CONNOTATION (emotional associations). The two must not be
confused. Choice A = connotation. Choice C = alliteration. Choice D = point of
view.
Etymology: Latin: de- (from / away from) + notare
(to mark). Root nota = a mark or sign. Related: note, notable, annotate,
connotation, notation. De- here suggests stripping away associations down to
the bare marking.
________________________________________
ROOM II: THE CLOCKWORK
CATACOMBS
Q4: FLASHBACK
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Flashback = an interruption in
chronological order to show an EARLIER event. The battle = present timeline;
the dying mother scene = a flashback to the past. The author uses this to
explain the hero's motivation. IMPORTANT: flashback goes BACK in time. Foreshadowing
(Choice A) looks FORWARD. Choice B = point of view. Choice D = climax.
Etymology: Modern English: flash (sudden burst of
light) + back (returning to the past). Coined in 20th-century literary
criticism. The Greek term is analepsis: ana- (back) + lambanein (to take).
________________________________________
Q5: EXPOSITION
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Exposition = the OPENING background
section: setting, characters, and situation introduced BEFORE the main action
begins. The 1850 seaside village, the fisherman, his daughter, and the
approaching storm are all exposition. Choice A = climax (turning point). Choice
C = motif (recurring element). Choice D = falling action.
Etymology: Latin: exponere (to set forth / lay out)
from ex- (out) + ponere (to place). Related: expose, export, express, explicit,
exponent. To "ex-pose" something is to place it out in the open.
________________________________________
Q6: RISING ACTION AND
FALLING ACTION
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Rising action = events that BUILD tension
toward the climax (theft, chase, capture, failed escape). Falling action =
events AFTER the climax that RELEASE tension toward resolution (villain
exposed, regrouping, healing). They are the two slopes of the story mountain.
Choice A confuses these with exposition and conflict introduction. Choices C
and D are factually false.
Etymology: Rising: Old English risan (to rise) +
Latin actio (doing / from agere = to do). Falling: Old English feallan (to
fall). The story-mountain metaphor is attributed to German writer Gustav
Freytag (1863).
________________________________________
ROOM III: THE POET'S
GARDEN
Q7: STANZA
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Stanza = a grouped unit of lines in a
poem, separated by white space -- like a paragraph in prose. The ocean poem has
four stanzas of six lines each. Choice A = a LINE (single row of words). Choice
C = rhyme scheme (the pattern of end sounds). Choice D = a couplet (two rhyming
lines only).
Etymology: Italian: stanza (room / stopping place)
from Latin stare (to stand). Related: stance, circumstance, substance,
instance. A stanza is literally a 'room' in a poem -- a place where the reader
can pause.
________________________________________
Q8: RHYME SCHEME
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Rhyme scheme = the PATTERN of rhyming end
sounds, labeled with letters. ABAB = lines 1 & 3 rhyme, lines 2 & 4
rhyme. AABB = consecutive pairs rhyme. The letters record the pattern, not the
actual words. Choice A = meter (stressed/unstressed syllable pattern). Choice B
= onomatopoeia (sound-imitating words). Choice D = assonance (internal vowel
repetition).
Etymology: Old French: rime (rhythm / rhyme) from
Greek rhythmos (flowing motion). Related: rhyme, rhythm, rhapsody. The
letter-labeling system is a tool of poetic analysis, not the poem itself.
________________________________________
Q9: ONOMATOPOEIA
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Onomatopoeia = words that SOUND LIKE what
they mean. CRASH, BUZZ, HISS, SIZZLE -- saying these words produces the actual
sound they describe. Choice A = alliteration (repeated initial consonants, not
sound-imitating). Choice C = simile (comparison with "like" or
"as"). Choice D = mood (reader's emotional response). Key test: does
saying the word make the sound?
Etymology: Greek: onoma (name) + poiein (to make /
create). Related: onoma source: synonym (same-name), antonym (opposite-name),
anonymous (without-name), acronym. Poiein = to make / also source of: poem,
poet, poetry.
________________________________________
ROOM IV: THE ECHO
CHAMBER
Q10: ASSONANCE
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Assonance = repeated VOWEL sounds inside
nearby words (not just at the ends). "Rain / Spain / stays / mainly /
plain" all share the /ay/ vowel. "Mellow / wedding / bells"
shares the /e/ vowel. NOT the same as rhyme (end sounds) or alliteration
(initial consonants). Choice A = alliteration. Choice B = onomatopoeia. Choice
D = rhyme scheme.
Etymology: Latin: assonare (to sound toward) from
ad- (to) + sonare (to sound). Root sonus = sound. Related: sonic, resonance,
consonance, dissonance, unison. The prefix ad- (to/toward) suggests sounds
reaching toward each other.
________________________________________
Q11: MOTIF
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Motif = a RECURRING element (image,
symbol, phrase) that accumulates meaning each time it appears. The locked door
appears five times -- each time reinforcing the theme of barriers to women's
opportunities. Choice A = theme (the MESSAGE). Choice C = diction (word
choice). Choice D = foreshadowing (forward-looking hints). A motif BUILDS
toward the theme.
Etymology: French: motif (motive / theme / pattern)
from Latin motivus (moving). Related: motivate, motive, motion, motor, emotion,
promotion. The root idea is something that MOVES or drives the work forward.
________________________________________
Q12: CHARACTERIZATION
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Characterization = the craft of building
character in the reader's mind. DIRECT = telling ("Marcus was
selfish"). INDIRECT = showing (rude to servant, steals credit, lies). Both
are forms of characterization. STAAR tests both. Choice A = setting. Choice B =
conflict. Choice D = point of view. Remember: characterization uses appearance,
speech, actions, thoughts, AND others' reactions.
Etymology: Latin: character (distinctive mark) +
-ization (the process of making). From Greek kharaktēr (engraved mark /
distinctive feature). Related: characteristic, characterize, character. The
word originally meant a stamped or engraved impression.
________________________________________
ROOM V: THE ARCHIVE OF
GENRES
Q13: GENRE
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Genre = a CATEGORY of literature defined
by its conventions, structure, and form. The four books = fiction (invented
story), nonfiction/autobiography (true account), drama (script for
performance), poetry (verse). Genre is about FORM and CONVENTIONS -- not topic,
quality, or reading level. Choice A = theme. Choice B = Lexile/difficulty.
Choice D = tone.
Etymology: French: genre (kind / sort / type) from
Latin genus (birth / kind / origin). Related: generate, gender, general,
generous, genetics, genuine, genre. The root gen- suggests origin or birth --
what category something was born into.
________________________________________
Q14: PARAPHRASE
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Paraphrase = restate meaning in YOUR OWN
words AND sentence structure while keeping the original meaning. The second
version communicates the same idea without copying a single phrase from the
original. Choice A = summarize (shorter, main points only). Choice B = quoting
(word-for-word, needs quotation marks). Choice D = not a recognized academic
reading skill.
Etymology: Greek: para- (beside / alongside) +
phrazein (to tell / express). Para- = alongside. Related: paragraph, parallel,
paramedic, parable, paranormal. A paraphrase runs "alongside" the
original, saying the same thing in new words.
________________________________________
Q15: SUMMARIZE
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Summarize = brief + objective + main
points only -- NOT all details. Student B captured the essential argument in
two sentences. Student A listed every statistic (too long, not a summary). KEY
DISTINCTION: summary is SHORTER than the original and captures the MAIN IDEA,
not every supporting detail. Paraphrase restates everything; summary distills
only the core.
Etymology: Latin: summa (the highest / total amount)
+ -ize (to make / perform). Related: sum, summit, assume, consume, resume,
summary. The image is of adding everything up to its highest total -- the
essential sum.
________________________________________
ROOM VI: THE TRIBUNAL
OF TRUTH
Q16: OBJECTIVE SUMMARY
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Objective summary = CONCISE + UNBIASED +
THIRD PERSON + main ideas only. Summary 3 reports what the article says
factually without personal opinion. Summaries 1 and 2 use personal opinion
("terrible," "I personally think"). Summary 4 copies text
word-for-word. Summary 5 is all personal perspective. The word OBJECTIVE means
without personal bias or feeling.
Etymology: Latin: objectivus (presented to the
senses / not colored by personal feeling) from objectum (thing thrown before
the mind). Related: object, objective, subjective, objection. Objective =
coming from outside the self; subjective = coming from inside.
________________________________________
Q17: THESIS
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: "Community service is good" = a
topic, NOT a thesis. "Requiring 40 hours develops civic responsibility,
builds professional skills, and strengthens community relationships" = a
thesis: SPECIFIC, ARGUABLE, and tells exactly what the essay will prove. A
thesis is always a COMPLETE SENTENCE making a CLAIM. It previews the essay's
main supporting points. Choice A = topic sentence. Choice D = conclusion.
Etymology: Greek: thesis (something set down /
placed) from tithenai (to place). Related: antithesis (against-placement),
synthesis (together-placement), hypothesis (under-placement), parenthesis. The
root the- = to set or place.
________________________________________
Q18: RESOLUTION
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Resolution = the CONCLUSION where the
central conflict is resolved. The brothers' recognition, the return of the
land, and the people going home = resolution of the war conflict. Note that
resolution does NOT mean everything is perfect -- it means the CENTRAL CONFLICT
has been addressed. Choice A = climax. Choice B = exposition. Choice D = rising
action.
Etymology: Latin: resolvere (to loosen again) from
re- (again) + solvere (to loosen / free). Related: resolve, solution, dissolve,
absolve, solvent. The image is of untying a knot -- loosening what had been
tied up by the conflict.
________________________________________
FINAL BOSS: THE WORD
LICH -- REBORN
QBOSS 1: PERSONIFICATION
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Personification = giving HUMAN qualities
to NON-HUMAN things. The tree "yearning," the city
"pacing," the wind "screaming," time "waiting,"
and the moon "watching with maternal patience" are all personification
-- none of these things can actually perform these human actions. Choice A =
metaphor (one thing IS another). Choice B = hyperbole (exaggeration). Choice D
= symbolism (representing abstract ideas).
Etymology: Latin: persona (mask / person) + facere
(to make) + -tion (noun suffix). Related: person, personal, impersonate,
personnel. Personification literally means "to make into a person" --
giving the object a human face.
________________________________________
QBOSS 2: IMAGERY
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Imagery = language that appeals to the
FIVE SENSES. The market passage uses: smell (cardamom, fish, wet wood), sound
(voice rising and falling), sight (children weaving like bright fish), and
taste/touch (cold, dripping mango -- sweet then sour). All five senses can
appear in imagery. Choice A = personification. Choice B = diction. Choice D =
simile. Note: the similes in the passage are part of the imagery.
Etymology: Latin: imago (likeness / picture / copy)
from imitari (to imitate). Related: image, imagine, imagination, imaginary. All
carry the root idea of creating a mental picture -- a copy of the real thing
inside the reader's mind.
________________________________________
________________________________________
VOLUME II COMPLETE --
READING SAGE
COMBINED VOCABULARY -- ALL VOLUMES:
Volume I (18 Questions): alliteration, antecedent,
foreshadowing, connotation, tone, symbolism, inference, figurative language,
metaphor, simile, protagonist, theme, conflict, context clues, hyperbole,
diction, point of view, text structure, claim, evidence, author's purpose,
central idea
Volume II (18 Questions): irony, mood, denotation, flashback,
exposition, rising action, falling action, stanza, rhyme scheme, onomatopoeia,
assonance, motif, characterization, genre, paraphrase, summarize, objective
summary, thesis, resolution, personification, imagery
Reading Sage Blog by
Taylor |
readingsage.com | STAAR ELA Prep | 6th
Grade Tier 3 Vocabulary
THE DUNGEON OF LOST WORDS
VOLUME III -- THE DEEPEST DESCENT
6th Grade Vocabulary
Quest |
18 All-New Questions | STAAR ELA Aligned
________________________________________
WHAT IS NEW IN VOLUME III
Volume III covers 18 completely new Tier 3 ELA vocabulary
words not tested in Volumes I or II. This volume focuses on Latin and Greek
roots, advanced literary devices, argument writing, and analytical reading
skills essential for 6th grade STAAR ELA success.
NEW WORDS COVERED:
Greek/Latin roots (bio, graph, dict, rupt, vert, spect, ject,
mit, tract, log), allusion, analogy, anecdote, perspective, bias,
cite/evidence, counterclaim, cohesion, evaluate, analyze, compare/contrast,
supporting details, meter/free verse, consonance, author's craft
________________________________________
CHARACTER SHEET -- VOLUME III
Name: ________________________________ Class: Word Scholar, Level 3
Starting HP: 20 | Current HP: _____ |
Questions Correct: _____ / 18
| Mistakes: _____
HP TRACKER -- Cross out a heart for every wrong answer (-5
HP each):
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
♥ ♥ ♥
________________________________________
ROOM I: THE ROOT
CELLAR
READ ALOUD:
You descend a crumbling staircase into a vast underground
cellar. The walls are made not of stone but of enormous roots -- living,
twisting, pulsing with faint green light. Words are carved into every surface.
A very old tortoise wearing spectacles peers up at you. "Words do not
simply exist," she says slowly. "They grow. Each one has roots buried
deep in ancient soil. Dig up the roots and you will never be confused by an
unfamiliar word again. You will be able to make an educated guess about any
word you have never seen before." She points one leathery claw toward
three glowing doors.
CHALLENGE 1 --
WORD: LATIN ROOTS: DICT / SCRIB / PORT
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The tortoise slides three carved tablets toward you. The first
tablet bears the Latin root DICT with its word family: dictate (to make someone
say/do), dictionary (a book of words), predict (to say before), verdict (to say
truly/declare), contradict (to say against), edict (an official declaration),
diction (manner of speaking). The second tablet bears SCRIB/SCRIPT: describe
(to write about), manuscript (written by hand), inscription (writing carved
into something), subscribe (to write one's name below), prescribe (to write
instructions ahead of time), scripture (sacred writings), scribble (to write
hastily). The third tablet bears PORT: transport (carry across), portable (able
to be carried), import (carry in), export (carry out), report (carry back), support
(carry from below), porter (one who carries things).
QUESTION: Based
on the word families on each tablet, which answer correctly identifies the
meanings of DICT, SCRIB/SCRIPT, and PORT?
A. dict =
believe; scrib/script = speak; port = write
B. dict = say or
speak; scrib/script = write; port = carry
C. dict =
carry; scrib/script = look or see; port = believe
D. dict =
write; scrib/script = carry; port = say or speak
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 2 --
WORD: LATIN ROOTS: RUPT / VERT / SPECT
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The second set of tablets shows three more Latin roots with
their families. RUPT appears in: interrupt (to break into something), rupture
(a break or tear), erupt (to break out suddenly), corrupt (broken in character
or morals), bankrupt (financially broken), abrupt (broken off suddenly without
warning). VERT/VERS appears in: convert (to turn from one thing to another),
reverse (to turn back), divert (to turn away), invert (to turn upside down),
controversy (a turning against someone), version (a turning of the original).
SPECT/SPEC appears in: inspect (to look into carefully), spectator (one who
looks at an event), perspective (looking through a particular lens), spectacle
(something remarkable to look at), suspect (to look under the surface).
QUESTION: Based
on the word families, which answer correctly identifies the meanings of RUPT,
VERT/VERS, and SPECT/SPEC?
A. rupt =
turn; vert/vers = look or see; spect/spec = break
B. rupt =
send; vert/vers = break; spect/spec = turn
C. rupt =
break; vert/vers = turn; spect/spec = look or see
D. rupt = look
or see; vert/vers = send; spect/spec = break
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 3 --
WORD: LATIN/GREEK ROOTS: JECT / MIT / TRACT / LOG
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The final four tablets each display a root and its word
family. JECT: eject (throw out), project (throw forward), reject (throw back),
inject (throw in), subject (thrown under authority), trajectory (path of
something thrown). MIT/MISS: transmit (send across), dismiss (send away),
mission (something sent with a purpose), emit (send out), submit (send
under/yield), missile (something sent through the air). TRACT: attract (pull
toward), tractor (machine that pulls), subtract (pull away from), contract (pull
together / an agreement that binds), extract (pull out). LOG: logic (the study
of correct reasoning), catalog (a complete listing of items), prologue (words
that come before), monologue (one person speaking alone), dialogue (words
exchanged between two or more people).
QUESTION: Based
on the four word families, which answer correctly matches each root to its
meaning?
A. ject =
send; mit/miss = throw; tract = word or reason; log = pull
B. ject =
throw; mit/miss = send; tract = pull or draw; log = word or reason
C. ject =
pull; mit/miss = word; tract = throw; log = send
D. ject =
word; mit/miss = pull; tract = send;
log = throw
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM I COMPLETE!
Treasures: Ancient Root Tablet, Tortoise Spectacles, Word
Family Scroll. Proceed to Room II!
ROOM II: THE GALLERY
OF REFERENCES
READ ALOUD:
The Gallery is lined floor to ceiling with paintings -- but
each one is only half finished. In each, a door opens onto another painting,
which opens onto another, on and on in an infinite chain of references. A
curator in a moth-eaten coat gestures broadly: "All writing is
conversation. Every text speaks to other texts. Every argument borrows from
other arguments. Every story echoes a story that came before. The scholar who
recognizes these echoes understands far more than the one who reads each text
in isolation."
CHALLENGE 4 --
WORD: ALLUSION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The first painting shows a student essay about perseverance.
In the middle of a paragraph about overcoming failure, the student writes:
"Like Sisyphus, condemned to push his boulder up the mountain forever, she
refused to give up even when her efforts seemed futile." In the margin,
the curator has written: "The student does not explain who Sisyphus is or
what his boulder represents. She assumes the reader already knows the Greek
myth -- that Sisyphus was punished by the gods to roll a boulder up a hill for eternity,
only to watch it roll back down each time. The reference to this well-known
story requires only a few words but carries an enormous weight of meaning. This
technique has a specific name in literary study."
QUESTION: Based
on the curator's annotation and the student essay, which of the following BEST
defines allusion?
A. An extended
comparison that uses "like" or "as" to explain a complex
idea by relating it to something more familiar
B. A brief,
indirect reference to a well-known person, place, event, myth, or literary work
that adds meaning without full explanation
C. A recurring
image or symbol that appears throughout a work and accumulates thematic
significance
D. The method an
author uses to develop and reveal a character's personality through actions,
dialogue, and appearance
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 5 --
WORD: ANALOGY
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The second painting shows a philosopher's chalkboard covered
with paired relationships. The top line reads: "A map is to a territory as
a menu is to a meal." Beneath it: "As a blueprint is to a building,
so a lesson plan is to a classroom." Below that: "As a key is to a
lock, so knowledge is to confusion." The curator explains: "Each of
these is not merely a comparison between two things. It is a comparison between
two RELATIONSHIPS. The first item relates to the second in exactly the same way
the third item relates to the fourth. This technique explains complex or
abstract ideas by showing that they work the same way as simpler, more familiar
relationships."
QUESTION: Based
on the chalkboard examples and the curator's explanation, which of the
following BEST defines analogy?
A. A brief,
indirect reference to a well-known cultural text, person, or event that adds
meaning with minimal explanation
B. An extreme
exaggeration used for emphasis or comic effect that is not meant to be taken
literally
C. A comparison
between two relationships that explains a complex concept by showing it works
the same way as a simpler, familiar relationship
D. The central
message or universal truth about human experience that an author communicates
through a literary work
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 6 --
WORD: ANECDOTE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The third painting shows an author at a podium delivering a
speech about the importance of education. She opens not with statistics or
arguments but with a story: "When I was nine years old, my family had no
books. I walked three miles every Saturday to the public library, not because
anyone told me to, but because those books were the only place I ever felt
fully awake. That library changed my life. And every child in this country
deserves the same chance." The curator circles the opening story:
"Notice how the speaker chose to begin. She had data. She had research.
She had policy arguments. But she opened with THIS. A small, specific story
about a real moment from a real life. It works because it is human."
QUESTION: Based
on the speech and the curator's annotation, which of the following BEST defines
anecdote as a writing technique?
A. A passage in
a story where the narrative jumps back in time to show an event before the main
plot
B. A short,
personal story about a specific real-life event used to illustrate a larger
point or engage the reader emotionally
C. A comparison
between two unlike things that states one thing is another without using
"like" or "as"
D. A piece of
evidence from an outside expert used to lend credibility to an argument
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM II COMPLETE!
Treasures: Allusion Lantern, Analogy Bridge, Anecdote Coin.
Proceed to Room III!
ROOM III: THE CHAMBER
OF PERSPECTIVES
READ ALOUD:
The Chamber of Perspectives is a circular room with no single
entrance or exit. Every wall is a window -- and every window looks out onto the
same courtyard, but from a different angle, different height, and different
time of day. What appears from one window as a peaceful garden appears from
another as a crowded marketplace. A figure in the center turns slowly, looking
through each window in turn. "There is no view from nowhere," she
says. "Every reader, every writer, every narrator stands somewhere -- and
where they stand shapes everything they see."
CHALLENGE 7 --
WORD: PERSPECTIVE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The figure shows you three accounts of the same school
assembly. The first is written by the school principal, who focuses on the
inspiring speakers, the students' attentiveness, and the event's success. The
second is written by a student who sat in the back row, was too far away to
hear clearly, had sore feet from standing in line, and spent most of the time
whispering with a friend. The third is written by a teacher who organized the
event and spent the whole time managing logistics from the side of the auditorium.
Each account is honest. None is lying. The figure says: "Each writer saw
the assembly through the lens of their own position, experience, knowledge, and
feelings -- and that lens made each account uniquely different."
QUESTION: Based
on the three accounts and the figure's explanation, which of the following BEST
defines perspective?
A. The overall
organizational structure an author uses to arrange information -- such as
chronological, cause/effect, or compare/contrast
B. The
particular point of view, background, experience, values, and position that
shape how a person understands and describes events
C. The pattern
of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of poetry that creates a
rhythmic, musical effect
D. A figure of
speech that gives human qualities and behaviors to non-human objects or
abstract ideas
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 8 --
WORD: BIAS
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The figure hands you two articles about the same local
election. The first article, from a newspaper owned by one of the candidates,
describes him as "a visionary leader with an unblemished record" and
his opponent as "a career politician known for broken promises." The
second article, from an independent news source, reports the factual voting
records and policy positions of both candidates without using evaluative
language. A placard in the chamber reads: "A bias is not always
intentional, and it is not always malicious. It is simply the leaning of a text
toward one side, one viewpoint, or one group -- influencing what information is
included, what is omitted, and what language is chosen to describe
events."
QUESTION: Based
on the two articles and the placard's explanation, which of the following BEST
defines bias in a text?
A. The use of
transitional words and phrases to connect ideas smoothly within and between
paragraphs
B. A comparison
between two relationships that explains one concept by showing how it parallels
another
C. A tendency or
inclination in a text that favors one side, viewpoint, or group over others --
influencing language, selection of information, and emphasis
D. The central
message or universal insight about human experience that an author communicates
through a literary work
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 9 --
WORD: CITE / EVIDENCE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The third challenge is a research exercise. A scholar hands
you a student argumentative essay with this claim: "Schools should provide
free breakfast to all students because hungry students cannot learn
effectively." In the margins she has marked three types of support. First,
a quotation with source: "According to the American Pediatric Research
Journal (2022), students who eat breakfast score 17.5% higher on reading
assessments." Second, a statistic: "35% of students in the district
arrive at school having eaten nothing." Third, a vague statement:
"Everyone knows that breakfast is important." She circles the third
entry in red: "This is an opinion stated as fact. It is not
evidence." She underlines the first two: "These are proper citations
because they are specific, verifiable, and attributed to a source."
QUESTION: Based
on the scholar's annotations, which of the following BEST explains what it
means to cite evidence in an argument?
A. To summarize
the main points of a text in your own words, shorter than the original and
without personal opinion
B. To provide
and attribute specific, verifiable facts, data, quotations, or examples from
credible sources to support a claim
C. To restate
someone else's ideas in your own words and sentence structure while preserving
the original meaning
D. To identify
and describe the organizational pattern an author used to structure information
in a text
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM III COMPLETE!
Treasures: Perspective Prism, Bias Detector, Citation Stamp.
Proceed to Room IV!
ROOM IV: THE ARENA OF
ARGUMENT
READ ALOUD:
The Arena of Argument is designed like an ancient debate hall
-- tiered stone seats encircling a central floor where two lecterns face each
other. A referee in robes stands between them: "Opinions are free.
Arguments cost something. An argument must be built -- claim by claim, evidence
by evidence, concession by concession. The scholar who can construct and
dismantle arguments owns the most powerful skill in all of language." She
gestures toward your first challenge.
CHALLENGE 10 --
WORD: COUNTERCLAIM
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The referee presents two student essays arguing that the
school lunch menu should include more vegetarian options. The first essay
presents three arguments for vegetarian options, then stops. The second essay
presents three arguments for vegetarian options, and then adds this paragraph:
"Some students and parents may argue that vegetarian meals do not provide
enough protein for growing adolescents, and that students will simply not eat
foods they are unfamiliar with. However, research from the National Nutrition
Institute shows that plant-based proteins such as legumes, tofu, and quinoa
meet all adolescent dietary requirements. Furthermore, studies show that
students introduced to diverse foods in a supported environment expand their
preferences over time." The referee nods at the second essay: "This
is the superior argument. A strong writer does not ignore opposition -- they
address it."
QUESTION: Based
on the referee's assessment and the second essay, which of the following BEST
defines counterclaim in argument writing?
A. The central
argument or controlling idea of an essay -- the complete, specific, arguable
statement the entire essay supports
B. An opposing
argument or objection to the writer's main claim that the writer acknowledges
and then responds to with evidence
C. A short
personal story used to introduce an argument and establish an emotional
connection with the reader
D. Factual data,
expert quotations, or specific examples used to prove a claim in an
argumentative essay
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 11 --
WORD: COHESION
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The referee slides two paragraphs in front of you. Both
contain the same ideas and evidence. The first reads: "Students benefit
from outdoor recess. Playing outside reduces stress. Stress hurts academic
performance. Outdoor activity improves focus. Focus helps with learning.
Schools should have more recess." The second reads: "Research
consistently shows that students benefit from outdoor recess. Because physical
play reduces cortisol -- the stress hormone -- students who spend time outside
return to the classroom with measurably better focus and fewer behavioral
disruptions. As a result, schools that prioritize outdoor time report stronger
academic outcomes overall." The referee asks: "Which paragraph holds
together? Which feels like loose bricks, and which feels like a strong wall
with mortar?"
QUESTION: Based
on the two paragraphs and the referee's question, which of the following BEST
defines cohesion in writing?
A. The inclusion
of a counterclaim in an argument that addresses and refutes the strongest
opposing viewpoint
B. The pattern
of rhyming sounds at the ends of lines in a poem, labeled with letters to show
which lines rhyme
C. The quality
of ideas being logically connected and flowing smoothly together, achieved
through transitions, pronouns, and logical organization
D. The author's
deliberate word choice considering formality, specificity, and emotional effect
on the reader
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 12 --
WORD: EVALUATE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The referee's final challenge presents three sources a student
found for a research paper on climate change. Source 1: A peer-reviewed article
from the journal Nature Climate Change, written by 17 climate scientists,
published in 2023, reporting findings from a 10-year study with full
methodology. Source 2: A Facebook post written by an anonymous user claiming
that "climate change is the greatest hoax of the century," with no
data or sources provided. Source 3: A 1997 encyclopedia entry about general
weather patterns, written before modern climate modeling existed. The referee
sets down the sources: "Before you use any of these, you must examine them
-- their author, their date, their evidence, their purpose -- and form a
judgment about their value and reliability."
QUESTION: Based
on the referee's description of examining sources for quality, reliability, and
value, which term BEST names this process?
A. Paraphrase --
to restate the source's ideas in your own words while preserving the original
meaning
B. Summarize --
to reduce the source to its most important main points in a brief, objective
statement
C. Analyze -- to
break the source into its parts and examine how those parts work together to
create meaning
D. Evaluate --
to judge the quality, reliability, credibility, and usefulness of a source
using specific criteria
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM IV COMPLETE!
Treasures: Counterclaim Shield, Cohesion Thread, Evaluator's
Magnifying Glass. Proceed to Room V!
ROOM V: THE
CARTOGRAPHER'S VAULT
READ ALOUD:
The Vault is filled with maps -- not of places, but of texts.
Maps of how arguments flow. Maps of how stories are built. Maps of where
meaning is made. The Cartographer, a tiny woman with ink-stained fingers, turns
from her drafting table. "Most readers walk through a building without
noticing the walls. The scholar I train can READ the building itself -- see the
structure, name the parts, understand why each element is placed exactly where
it is. That is the deepest form of reading."
CHALLENGE 13 --
WORD: ANALYZE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The Cartographer points to a specific scene in a short story:
a teenager slams a door, refuses dinner, and stares out the window for three
hours. "A student who says 'the teenager was upset' has only described. A
student who says 'the author uses the slammed door -- a physical, external
action -- to externalize the character's internal conflict, suggesting that she
expresses emotion through behavior rather than words, which deepens our sense
of her isolation' has done something far more powerful. The second student did
not just tell WHAT happened. They explained HOW the author built the effect and
WHY that choice matters." She taps the second response: "Name what
the second student did."
QUESTION: Based
on the Cartographer's comparison of the two responses, which of the following
BEST defines analyze in reading and writing?
A. To provide a
brief, objective restatement of the main points of a text without including
personal opinion
B. To restate
someone else's ideas in your own words while preserving the original meaning of
the passage
C. To examine
the parts of a text carefully and explain HOW and WHY they work together to
create meaning, effect, or argument
D. To judge the
quality and reliability of a source by examining its author, evidence, date,
and purpose
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 14 --
WORD: COMPARE AND CONTRAST
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The second map shows two short stories side by side -- one set
in medieval Europe, one set in modern Tokyo. Both stories center on a young
person who discovers their family has kept a dangerous secret. The Cartographer
draws two overlapping circles. In the overlapping center she writes:
"secret within family / young protagonist / feeling of betrayal / theme of
trust." In the left circle alone: "medieval setting, horse travel, no
technology, feudal society." In the right circle alone: "modern
Tokyo, smartphones, internet, corporate world." She says: "Whether
you show what two things share, what makes them different, or both -- you are
performing two distinct but related analytical operations. Name them
correctly."
QUESTION: Based
on the Cartographer's diagram, which of the following correctly defines both
compare and contrast?
A. Compare means
to judge the quality of two things;
contrast means to rank them from best to worst
B. Compare means
to show the similarities between two or more things; contrast means to show the differences
between them
C. Compare means
to summarize two texts in your own words;
contrast means to quote directly from both texts
D. Compare means
to identify the theme of two works;
contrast means to identify the author's purpose of each
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 15 --
WORD: SUPPORTING DETAILS
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The Cartographer's final map shows the structure of an
informational article. At the top is the central idea: "The invention of
the printing press in 1440 fundamentally transformed European society."
Connected below by branching lines are multiple smaller boxes: "Books
became affordable for the first time in history. Literacy rates across Europe
tripled within 100 years. Scientific ideas could be shared across borders. The
Protestant Reformation was accelerated by the rapid spread of Martin Luther's
writings. Education shifted from exclusively religious institutions to broader
civil society." The Cartographer taps the smaller boxes: "Each of
these does something very specific for the central idea. They are not the
central idea itself. What is their job?"
QUESTION: Based
on the Cartographer's diagram and her question, which of the following BEST
defines supporting details?
A. The emotional
associations and cultural feelings that specific words carry beyond their
literal dictionary definitions
B. The
organizational pattern the author chose to arrange information -- such as
cause/effect or compare/contrast
C. Facts,
statistics, examples, quotations, or anecdotes that explain and prove the
central idea of a text
D. The
transitional words and phrases that connect ideas within and between paragraphs
to create smooth logical flow
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM V COMPLETE!
Treasures: Analysis Compass, Scholar's Map, Detail Chisel.
Proceed to Room VI!
ROOM VI: THE
OBSERVATORY OF CRAFT
READ ALOUD:
The Observatory dome opens to a sky filled not with stars but
with words -- millions of them, drifting and glowing and arranging themselves
into sentences, then paragraphs, then stories. A master craftsman in a leather
apron sits at a workbench surrounded by tools you do not recognize. "Every
word that floats above us was placed there deliberately by a writer who made a
choice," he says. "A great reader does not merely receive what a
writer sends. A great reader understands the craft -- the choices made, the
effects achieved. These final three challenges test whether you understand
writing at the level of craft."
CHALLENGE 16 --
WORD: METER AND FREE VERSE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The craftsman places two poems before you. The first has a
strict musical beat -- every line contains exactly ten syllables, alternating
between unstressed and stressed: "Shall I com-PARE thee TO a SUM-mer's
DAY?" The pattern is da-DUM repeated five times across ten syllables. This
is called iambic pentameter. The second poem has no consistent beat at all --
the lines vary in length, the rhythm follows the natural flow of speech, and
there is no predictable pattern of stress or syllable count. The craftsman
says: "Both are valid forms of poetry. One wears a formal suit. One wears
what it needs to. Know the difference between them."
QUESTION: Based
on the craftsman's two poems, which of the following correctly distinguishes
meter from free verse?
A. Meter is
poetry that does not rhyme, while free verse always follows a strict rhyme
scheme
B. Meter is the
regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry that creates a
consistent rhythmic beat, while free verse is poetry that does not follow a
consistent pattern of meter or rhyme
C. Meter refers
only to the number of lines in a stanza, while free verse refers only to the
number of syllables per line
D. Meter is used
only in ancient Greek and Latin poetry, while free verse is exclusively modern
American poetry
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 17 --
WORD: CONSONANCE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The craftsman places two poetic devices side by side for
careful comparison. On the left: "The fair breeze blew, the white foam
flew, the furrow followed free." He highlights the repeated /f/ sound --
but notice it appears not only at the BEGINNING of words (free, foam, furrow,
followed) but also in the MIDDLE of words (breeze, white). On the right:
"The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain." He highlights the
repeated /ay/ vowel sound running through the interior of the words. He sets
down his tools: "One of these repeats a CONSONANT sound -- and that
consonant does not have to appear at the beginning of the word. The other
repeats a VOWEL sound. Both create music. But they are different devices."
QUESTION: Based
on the craftsman's two examples, which of the following BEST defines
consonance?
A. The
repetition of initial consonant sounds at the beginning of nearby words only --
also called alliteration
B. The
repetition of consonant sounds within or at the ends of nearby words, where the
sound does not need to be at the beginning
C. The
repetition of vowel sounds in the middle of nearby words, creating an internal
musical echo
D. The pattern
of rhyming sounds at the ends of poetic lines, labeled with letters
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE 18 --
WORD: DICTION AND TONE WORKING TOGETHER
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The craftsman shows one event -- a student failing an
important exam -- described three different ways. Version A: "Marcus
received a score below the required threshold on the standardized assessment,
which will necessitate remediation." Version B: "Marcus bombed the
test. Totally tanked it. Crashed and burned." Version C: "Marcus sat
for a long moment staring at the paper, the red number at the top -- 58 --
smaller than any number he had ever wanted to see." The craftsman folds
his hands: "Same event. Three completely different emotional experiences
for the reader. Two craft elements work together in each version to create that
difference -- one is the specific words chosen, and the other is the author's
attitude those words create toward the subject."
QUESTION: Based
on the three versions, which of the following BEST identifies the two craft
elements working together to create the different reader experiences?
A. Imagery and
theme -- the sensory details and the universal message create the difference
between the versions
B. Rhyme scheme
and meter -- the sound patterns of each version create entirely different
emotional effects
C. Diction and
tone -- the specific word choices (diction) create the author's attitude toward
the subject (tone), and both work together to shape the reader's experience
D. Alliteration
and onomatopoeia -- the sound devices in each version carry the emotional
weight of the description
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
ROOM VI COMPLETE!
Treasures: Meter Tuning Fork, Craft Lens, Master's Apron.
PREPARE FOR THE FINAL BOSS!
*** FINAL BOSS: THE
ARCHITECT OF SHADOWS ***
READ ALOUD:
The Architect of Shadows is not the Word Lich -- it is
something older. A figure made entirely of text: letters crawling over a
humanoid shape, paragraphs shifting and reforming with every breath. "The
Lich was a thief," the Architect says, in a voice like pages turning.
"I am something more dangerous. I am a BUILDER -- and what I build is
confusion. I have spent centuries constructing misunderstandings, false
inferences, poorly supported claims, and sloppy analysis. Only a scholar who understands
the full architecture of language can dismantle what I build. Two final
challenges. Give me everything you have."
CHALLENGE BOSS 1 --
WORD: INFERENCE AND EVIDENCE COMBINED
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The Architect conjures a passage: "Dr. Reyes arrived at
her office at 6:45 a.m., forty-five minutes before anyone else. Her desk was
buried under three open laptops, seventeen sticky notes, and two half-drunk
cups of coffee that had long gone cold. The presentation was in six hours. She
typed without stopping, not looking up when her colleague knocked, responding
only with a raised hand. By 9 a.m. she had revised the same slide eleven
times." The Architect challenges: "This passage never uses the words
stressed, worried, pressured, or anxious. Yet any careful reader can name Dr.
Reyes's emotional state precisely -- and can point to specific details in the
text that prove it. Name BOTH the skill of reaching that unstated conclusion
AND the name for the specific textual details that support it."
QUESTION: Which
of the following BEST names BOTH the skill of reaching an unstated conclusion
AND the textual details that support it?
A. Paraphrase
and thesis -- restating her actions in your own words and identifying the
controlling argument of the passage
B. Summarize and
central idea -- briefly retelling the passage and identifying its most
important point
C. Inference and
evidence -- drawing a logical conclusion about Dr. Reyes's emotional state
(inference) supported by specific details from the text such as arriving early,
cold coffee, and eleven revisions (evidence)
D. Analyze and
evaluate -- breaking the passage into parts and judging the quality of the
author's writing choices
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
CHALLENGE BOSS 2 --
WORD: AUTHOR'S CRAFT -- COMPREHENSIVE
READING PASSAGE (7th-8th Grade Level):
The Architect creates a passage and demands you name every
craft choice: "The hospital corridor stretched ahead like a lifetime of
bad decisions -- white, endless, indifferent. Maria's shoes squeaked against
the floor with every step, each squeak an accusation. The fluorescent lights
hummed their cold, mechanical condolence. She had walked this hall a hundred
times, but tonight it felt as though the hall itself was watching, waiting,
judging." The Architect speaks: "I count at least five distinct
literary and craft devices working simultaneously in this passage. Your answer
must identify the MOST devices correctly."
QUESTION: Which
answer choice identifies the MOST literary and craft devices present in the
hospital corridor passage?
A. Metaphor only
-- "like a lifetime of bad decisions" is the only literary device in
the passage
B. Simile and
onomatopoeia only -- the corridor comparison and the squeaking shoes
C. Simile,
onomatopoeia, personification, imagery, and tone -- the corridor compared to
bad decisions (simile), squeaking shoes (onomatopoeia), the hall watching and
judging (personification), sensory details of white light and cold humming
(imagery), and the overall oppressive feeling created (tone)
D. Alliteration
and rhyme scheme -- the repeated sounds and the pattern of end sounds in the
passage
My Answer: _______
HP Lost: _______ Treasure
Earned: [ ]
________________________________________
*** THE ARCHITECT OF SHADOWS IS DEFEATED! VOLUME III
IS COMPLETE! ***
GRAND MASTER RANK GUIDE:
18/18 correct = LEGENDARY SCHOLAR -- Full STAAR Mastery!
15-17 correct = GRAND MASTER -- Excellent Command of
Vocabulary!
11-14 correct = JOURNEYMAN -- Review the Answer Key and
Retry!
Below 11 = APPRENTICE -- Study the reference sections in
all three volumes!
COMPLETE ANSWER KEY --
VOLUME III
For teacher/parent use, or read after completing the campaign.
________________________________________
ROOM I: THE ROOT
CELLAR
Q1: LATIN ROOTS: DICT /
SCRIB / PORT
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: DICT = say or speak: dictate (make someone
say), dictionary (book of words), predict (say before), verdict (say truly).
SCRIB/SCRIPT = write: describe (write about), manuscript (written by hand),
subscribe (write below). PORT = carry: transport (carry across), portable (able
to be carried), import (carry in), export (carry out). Knowing these three
roots unlocks dozens of English vocabulary words instantly.
Etymology: dict: Latin dicere (to say/speak).
scrib/script: Latin scribere (to write). port: Latin portare (to carry). These
are three of the most productive Latin roots in the English language. Together
they appear in hundreds of academic vocabulary words.
________________________________________
Q2: LATIN ROOTS: RUPT / VERT
/ SPECT
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: RUPT = break: interrupt (break into),
rupture (a break), erupt (break out), corrupt (broken in character), abrupt
(broken off suddenly). VERT/VERS = turn: convert (turn from), reverse (turn
back), divert (turn away), controversy (turning against). SPECT/SPEC = look or
see: inspect (look into), spectator (one who looks), perspective (looking
through), suspect (look under). Recognizing these roots decodes hundreds of
words.
Etymology: rupt: Latin rumpere/ruptum (to break).
vert/vers: Latin vertere (to turn). spect/spec: Latin specere (to look/see).
These roots are among the most common in academic English vocabulary. Spect
also gives us: spectacles, spectacular, expect, respect, aspect.
________________________________________
Q3: LATIN/GREEK ROOTS: JECT
/ MIT / TRACT / LOG
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: JECT = throw: eject (throw out), project
(throw forward), reject (throw back), trajectory (path of something thrown).
MIT/MISS = send: transmit (send across), dismiss (send away), emit (send out),
missile (something sent). TRACT = pull/draw: attract (pull toward), tractor
(pulls things), subtract (pull away). LOG = word/reason: logic (study of
reasoning), prologue (words before), dialogue (words between). Knowing these
unlocks enormous vocabulary.
Etymology: ject: Latin jacere/jectum (to throw).
mit/miss: Latin mittere/missum (to send). tract: Latin trahere/tractum (to
pull/draw). log: Greek logos (word/reason/study) -- also source of: biology
(life-study), psychology (mind-study), geology (earth-study), technology
(craft-study).
________________________________________
ROOM II: THE GALLERY
OF REFERENCES
Q4: ALLUSION
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Allusion = a brief, indirect reference to
a well-known text, person, event, or myth. The Sisyphus reference is an
allusion -- the writer uses just a name to carry an enormous weight of meaning,
assuming the reader already knows the Greek myth. This makes writing efficient.
Choice A = analogy (comparison of relationships). Choice C = motif (recurring
element). Choice D = characterization.
Etymology: Latin: allusio from alludere (to play
with / refer to) from ad- (to) + ludere (to play). Related: allude, illusion,
delusion, prelude, interlude. The root ludere = to play -- an allusion
"plays with" a reference.
________________________________________
Q5: ANALOGY
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Analogy = a comparison between two
RELATIONSHIPS (A:B as C:D). "Map is to territory as menu is to a
meal" -- both are representations, not the real thing. This differs from
simile (comparing two objects) and metaphor (saying one thing IS another).
Analogy explains a new or complex relationship by showing it mirrors a familiar
one. Choice A = allusion. Choice B = hyperbole. Choice D = theme.
Etymology: Greek: analogia (proportion / equality of
ratios) from ana- (according to) + logos (ratio/word/reason). Related:
analogous, analogize. The logos root = reason/word -- also found in: logic,
catalog, dialogue, prologue.
________________________________________
Q6: ANECDOTE
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Anecdote = a short, specific personal
story used to illustrate a larger point or engage readers emotionally. The
speaker's library story is an anecdote -- brief, real, personal, and used to
support a larger argument about education. It is NOT a flashback (narrative
technique in fiction), NOT a metaphor (comparison), and NOT expert testimony
(outside authority with credentials).
Etymology: Greek: anekdota (unpublished / private
accounts) from an- (not) + ekdotos (published). Originally meant unpublished
private stories shared informally. Related: anecdotal, anecdotally. The prefix
an- = not (also in: anonymous, anarchy, anemia).
________________________________________
ROOM III: THE CHAMBER
OF PERSPECTIVES
Q7: PERSPECTIVE
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Perspective = the particular viewpoint,
experience, position, values, and background that shape how a person
understands and describes events. The principal, student, and teacher have
different perspectives of the same assembly -- all honest, none complete.
Perspective shapes what details a person notices and how they interpret them.
Choice A = text structure. Choice C = meter. Choice D = personification.
Etymology: Latin: perspectus from perspicere (to
look through) from per- (through) + specere (to look). Related: perspective,
perspicacious, spectacle, inspect, respect, expect. The root specere = to
look/see runs through all of these words.
________________________________________
Q8: BIAS
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Bias = a tendency or inclination that
favors one side -- affecting language, what information is included, and what
is left out. The candidate's newspaper uses loaded positive language for him
and loaded negative language for his opponent -- revealing bias. The
independent source uses neutral, factual language -- no visible bias. Readers
must be able to identify bias in texts they read. Choice A = cohesion. Choice B
= analogy. Choice D = theme.
Etymology: Old French: biais (slant / diagonal cut).
The image is of a slanted cut that leans to one side rather than remaining
straight. Related: biased, unbiased, nonbiased. In modern use: confirmation
bias, cognitive bias, media bias.
________________________________________
Q9: CITE / EVIDENCE
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: To cite evidence = to provide and
attribute specific, verifiable facts, data, or quotations from credible sources
to support a claim. The study with named journal, year, and specific statistic
= properly cited evidence. "Everyone knows..." = an unsupported
opinion masquerading as evidence. On STAAR, students must distinguish evidence
from unsupported claims. Choice A = summarize. Choice C = paraphrase. Choice D
= text structure.
Etymology: cite: Latin citare (to call / summon).
Related: recite, citation, incite, excite. Evidence: Latin evidentia (clearness
/ visibility) from e- (out) + videre (to see). Related: evident, video, vision,
provide, revise -- all from videre (to see).
________________________________________
ROOM IV: THE ARENA OF
ARGUMENT
Q10: COUNTERCLAIM
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Counterclaim = an opposing argument that
the writer acknowledges AND then refutes with evidence. The second essay is
superior because it addresses the strongest objection (protein, unfamiliar
foods) and then disproves it with research data. Ignoring the counterclaim
makes an argument weaker -- it suggests the writer has not thought about the
opposition. Choice A = thesis. Choice C = anecdote. Choice D = evidence.
Etymology: Latin: contra- (against) + clamare (to
shout / declare). Counter- = opposing. Related: counterargument, counteract,
contradict, controversy. The root clamare also gives us: exclaim, proclaim,
reclaim, acclaim, clamor.
________________________________________
Q11: COHESION
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Cohesion = the quality of smooth, logical
connection. The second paragraph uses transitional phrases
("Because," "As a result"), cause-effect structure, and
connecting vocabulary that makes ideas flow together. The first paragraph lists
facts without connecting them -- it lacks cohesion. Think of mortar between
bricks: cohesion is the mortar that holds the ideas together. Choice A =
counterclaim. Choice B = rhyme scheme. Choice D = diction.
Etymology: Latin: cohaerere (to cling together) from
co- (together) + haerere (to stick / adhere). Related: cohere, coherent,
coherence, incoherent, adhesive. The root haerere also gives us: hesitate (to
stick/pause), inherent (stuck inside), adhere (to stick to).
________________________________________
Q12: EVALUATE
CORRECT ANSWER: D
Explanation: Evaluate = to judge quality, reliability,
and usefulness using specific criteria. Source 1 (peer-reviewed, 17 scientists,
2023, 10-year study) = highly credible. Source 2 (anonymous Facebook, no data)
= not credible. Source 3 (1997, outdated) = unreliable for current science. The
act of examining and judging their value = evaluate. STAAR frequently asks
students to evaluate sources and arguments. Choice A = paraphrase. Choice B =
summarize. Choice C = analyze.
Etymology: Latin: e- (out / thoroughly) + valere (to
be strong / worth). Related: value, valid, valuable, equivalent, valor,
valiant. Valere = to be strong or worth -- also source of: prevalent (strongly
spread), convalescent (gaining strength again).
________________________________________
ROOM V: THE
CARTOGRAPHER'S VAULT
Q13: ANALYZE
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Analyze = examine parts and explain HOW
and WHY they work. The student who explains "the author uses the slammed
door to externalize the character's internal conflict" is analyzing --
examining the craft choice and explaining its effect on the reader. The student
who says "she was upset" is only describing. Analysis goes beyond
WHAT to HOW and WHY. Choice A = summarize. Choice B = paraphrase. Choice D =
evaluate.
Etymology: Greek: ana- (up / throughout / according
to) + lyein (to loosen / release). Related: analysis, analyst, analytical,
paralyze, catalyze. The image is of loosening something apart carefully to
examine each component -- the opposite of synthesis (putting together).
________________________________________
Q14: COMPARE AND CONTRAST
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Compare = show SIMILARITIES (the
overlapping center of the diagram: secret, protagonist, betrayal, trust).
Contrast = show DIFFERENCES (the separate circles: medieval vs. modern
settings). These are two distinct but related analytical operations. On STAAR,
students are frequently asked to compare and contrast characters, texts,
settings, and ideas. Choice A confuses compare with judgment/ranking.
Etymology: compare: Latin com- (together) + parare
(to prepare / set equal). contrast: Latin contra- (against) + stare (to stand).
The images are: comparison = placing things together to see what matches;
contrast = placing things against each other to see what differs.
________________________________________
Q15: SUPPORTING DETAILS
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Supporting details = facts, examples,
statistics, anecdotes, or quotations that PROVE and EXPLAIN the central idea.
The five boxes in the diagram all support the central idea that the printing
press transformed European society. They do NOT state the central idea
themselves -- they provide the EVIDENCE for it. Central idea + supporting
details = the core of any informational text. Choice A = connotation. Choice B
= text structure. Choice D = transitions.
Etymology: support: Latin sub- (under) + portare (to
carry) -- literally "to carry from below." The image is of support
columns holding up a structure. Related: support, portable, transport, import,
export, report -- all from portare (to carry).
________________________________________
ROOM VI: THE
OBSERVATORY OF CRAFT
Q16: METER AND FREE VERSE
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Meter = a regular, predictable pattern of
stressed and unstressed syllables. Iambic pentameter = da-DUM x5, 10 syllables
per line (Shakespeare's preferred form). Free verse = no consistent pattern of
meter OR rhyme -- follows natural speech rhythms. Both are valid and widely
used. Choice A has the definitions reversed. Choices C and D are factually
incorrect.
Etymology: meter: Greek metron (measure). Related:
metric, geometry (geo+metry), thermometer, diameter, perimeter -- all involve
measuring. Free verse: French vers libre (free line). Vers from Latin versus (a
turning of the plow) -- the origin of: verse, version, reverse, aversion.
________________________________________
Q17: CONSONANCE
CORRECT ANSWER: B
Explanation: Consonance = repetition of CONSONANT
sounds within or at the ENDS of nearby words -- NOT limited to the beginning of
words (that would be alliteration). "The fair breeze blew, the white foam
flew, the furrow followed free" -- the /f/ sound appears at the beginning
of some words AND inside/at the end of others. Assonance (the second example)
repeats VOWEL sounds. Both create music but are different devices. Choice A =
alliteration (initial sounds only). Choice C = assonance. Choice D = rhyme scheme.
Etymology: Latin: con- (together) + sonare (to
sound). Root sonus = sound. Related: sonic, resonance, dissonance, unison,
sonnet -- all from sonus. Assonance: Latin ad- (to) + sonare. The difference:
con- (together/with) vs. ad- (toward) reflects how consonance sounds pull
together while assonance sounds reach toward each other.
________________________________________
Q18: DICTION AND TONE
WORKING TOGETHER
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: Diction = the specific words chosen
(Version A: formal/clinical; Version B: slang/casual; Version C:
precise/literary). Tone = the author's attitude those words create toward the
subject (A: detached/bureaucratic; B: humorous/irreverent; C: quietly devastating/empathetic).
Diction CREATES tone -- they are deeply connected craft elements. Knowing both
and how they interact is an advanced STAAR analytical skill. Choice A = imagery
and theme. Choice B = sound devices (not present).
Etymology: diction: Latin dictio (act of saying)
from dicere (to say). Related: dictate, dictionary, predict, contradict,
verdict. tone: Greek tonos (stretch/tension/sound) -- Latin tonus. Related:
intonation (the rise/fall of speaking), monotone (one tone), atone (to come
into one tone), tonal, overtone.
________________________________________
FINAL BOSS: THE
ARCHITECT OF SHADOWS
QBOSS 1: INFERENCE AND
EVIDENCE COMBINED
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: The passage never states Dr. Reyes is
stressed -- we INFER it (inference = logical conclusion drawn from textual
evidence combined with prior knowledge). The specific textual details that
support this inference are called EVIDENCE: arriving 45 minutes early, cold
untouched coffee, not looking up when someone knocks, revising the same slide
11 times. These two skills -- inference and evidence -- work together in
virtually every STAAR reading question. Know both. Choice A = paraphrase +
thesis. Choice B = summarize + central idea. Choice D = analyze + evaluate.
Etymology: inference: Latin in- (into) + ferre (to
carry/bring) -- "carrying meaning into" the unstated. evidence: Latin
e- (out) + videre (to see) -- "what can be seen out of / made visible
from" the text. Both are core STAAR analytical reading skills that appear
on nearly every test.
________________________________________
QBOSS 2: AUTHOR'S CRAFT --
COMPREHENSIVE
CORRECT ANSWER: C
Explanation: The passage contains ALL FIVE devices
named in Choice C: SIMILE ("like a lifetime of bad decisions" -- uses
"like"), ONOMATOPOEIA ("squeaked"), PERSONIFICATION (the
hall "watching, waiting, judging" -- human behaviors given to a
hallway), IMAGERY (white corridor, fluorescent hum, squeaking floors -- appeals
to sight, sound, and touch), TONE (the accumulated effect is oppressive,
suffocating, inescapable -- the reader feels trapped alongside Maria). Choice A
names only one device. Choice B names only two. Choice D is incorrect -- no
alliteration or rhyme scheme is present.
Etymology: craft: Old English craeft (skill / art /
power). In literary study, craft = the deliberate, skilled techniques a writer
deploys to achieve specific effects. Identifying multiple craft elements
simultaneously and explaining how they work together is the highest level of
literary analysis assessed on STAAR.
________________________________________
________________________________________
ALL THREE VOLUMES
COMPLETE -- READING SAGE
COMBINED VOCABULARY COVERAGE -- ALL THREE VOLUMES:
Volume I (18 Questions):
alliteration, antecedent, foreshadowing, connotation, tone,
symbolism, inference, figurative language, metaphor, simile, protagonist,
theme, conflict (internal/external), context clues, hyperbole, diction, point
of view, text structure, claim, evidence, author's purpose, central idea
Volume II (18 Questions):
irony, mood, denotation, flashback, exposition, rising action,
falling action, stanza, rhyme scheme, onomatopoeia, assonance, motif,
characterization, genre, paraphrase, summarize, objective summary, thesis,
resolution, personification, imagery
Volume III (18 Questions):
Latin/Greek roots (dict, scrib, port, rupt, vert, spect, ject,
mit, tract, log), allusion, analogy, anecdote, perspective, bias,
cite/evidence, counterclaim, cohesion, evaluate, analyze, compare/contrast,
supporting details, meter, free verse, consonance, diction + tone combined,
author's craft comprehensive
________________________________________
FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES:
1. Flash Cards -- Word on front, definition + example sentence
+ etymology on back.
2. Root Word Web -- Pick any Latin/Greek root from Volume III
Room I and brainstorm 8+ related words.
3. Text Hunt -- Find 2 examples of each literary device in
your current independent reading book.
4. Author's Chair -- Write a short story that deliberately
uses 10 of the vocabulary devices. Label each one in the margin.
5. STAAR Prep -- Before every practice test, review the Quick
Reference charts from Volume I.
Reading Sage Blog by
Taylor |
readingsage.com | STAAR ELA Prep | 6th
Grade Tier 3 Vocabulary















No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you!