Sunday, June 7, 2026

GRADE 4 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with Answer Key

 Reading Comprehension Assessment Series 

GRADE 4

VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT

The Silk Road: Trade, Transmission & the Language of Connection

GRADE 8 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with A...
GRADE 7 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with A...
GRADE 6 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with A...
GRADE 5 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with A...
GRADE 4 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with A...
GRADE 3 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with A...  

Webb's Depth of Knowledge  ·  Hess's Cognitive Rigor Matrix

Context Clues  ·  Figurative Language  ·  Multiple Meanings  ·  Tier 2 & Tier 3 Vocabulary

Frustration-Level Text  ·  Full-Stack Assessment

 

Student Name: _________________________________   Date: ____________

Teacher: _________________________________   Period / Class: ____________


 GRADE 4  Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with Answer Key

SKILL REFERENCE: VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT QUESTION CATEGORIES

Seven question types assess your full vocabulary-in-context skill set. The table below defines each category and its cognitive demand level.

 

Question Category

Skill Tested

DOK / CRM Range

Points

Context Clues — Direct Definition

Locate embedded definition; infer from appositive or restatement

DOK 1–2 / A-1–B-2

2 pts each

Context Clues — Inference

Use surrounding sentences to infer meaning without an explicit definition

DOK 2–3 / B-2–C-3

2 pts each

Figurative Language — Metaphor

Interpret a non-literal comparison embedded in the text

DOK 2–3 / B-2–C-3

2 pts each

Figurative Language — Idiom / Simile / Personification

Identify figurative meaning; explain rhetorical effect

DOK 2–3 / B-2–C-3

2 pts each

Multiple Meanings

Choose the meaning of a polysemous word that fits the specific context

DOK 2–3 / B-2–C-3

2 pts each

Connotation / Tone

Distinguish between denotative meaning and connotative weight; identify author's tone

DOK 3 / C-3

2 pts each

Short Answer — Vocabulary

Construct definitions; explain figurative meaning; analyze word choice effect

DOK 3–4 / C-3–D-4

10 pts each

Extended Response

Analyze how vocabulary and figurative language work together to develop meaning and tone

DOK 4 / D-4

20 pts

 

DIRECTIONS

Read the passage carefully. Annotate for unfamiliar words, figurative language, and word choices that seem deliberate. The category label in brackets on each question tells you which vocabulary skill is being tested. For written responses, cite specific words or phrases and use formal academic register.

 

PASSAGE: THE SILK ROAD — WEB, TAPESTRY & NERVOUS SYSTEM

 

Long before the age of container ships, fiber-optic cables, or intercontinental air travel, human beings found a way to connect the world. For more than a millennium—a period of one thousand years—a network of overland and maritime trade routes linked the civilizations of China, Central Asia, Persia, Arabia, India, Africa, and Europe in a web of commercial and cultural exchange. Scholars call this network the Silk Road, though the name is something of a misnomer: the routes traded far more than silk, and they were never a single road at all.

The Silk Road earned its name from one of its most prized commodities—goods that are bought and sold—silk fabric woven in Chinese workshops with a skill and secrecy so jealously guarded that China maintained a monopoly on its production for centuries. European aristocrats, Middle Eastern merchants, and Indian royalty paid extraordinary prices for Chinese silk because it was impossible to obtain anywhere else. The Chinese government was so protective of its silk-making knowledge that smuggling silkworm eggs or mulberry seeds out of the empire was punishable by death.

But silk was only one thread in the vast tapestry of Silk Road exchange. Spices including cinnamon, pepper, and cardamom flowed westward from South and Southeast Asia, so valuable that they were sometimes used as currency—a medium of exchange accepted in place of money. Paper and gunpowder, both invented in China, traveled westward and eventually transformed the intellectual and military landscapes of Europe. Glassware and gold moved eastward from the Roman and Byzantine empires. Ideas, mathematical systems, religious beliefs, and artistic styles crossed borders as invisibly as the wind, leaving their marks on civilizations that never met face to face.

The Silk Road was not simply a conduit for material goods—it was a crucible of civilizational contact. The spread of Buddhism from India to China, the dissemination of Islam across Central Asia, and the diffusion of Greek philosophical traditions into Arabic scholarship all traveled, at least in part, along Silk Road routes. The Black Death—the catastrophic bubonic plague that killed roughly one-third of Europe's population in the fourteenth century—also traveled the Silk Road, carried in the bodies of rodents aboard merchant caravans, demonstrating with terrible clarity that trade routes carry everything that travels with traders.

The Silk Road began to decline in the fifteenth century as European maritime powers developed oceanic trade routes that were faster, cheaper, and capable of moving greater quantities of goods. The Ottoman Empire's control of overland routes into Asia also made land-based trade increasingly costly and dangerous for European merchants. By the sixteenth century, the Age of Exploration—itself made possible in part by navigational and astronomical knowledge that had traveled the Silk Road centuries earlier—had effectively rendered the ancient network obsolete.

Contemporary scholars argue that the Silk Road's true legacy is not the silk or the spices or even the gunpowder—it is the proof that human beings have always sought connection across distance and difference, and that the exchange of ideas is at least as consequential as the exchange of goods. The Silk Road was not merely a trade route; it was, for a thousand years, the nervous system of the ancient world.

 

SECTION A — CONTEXT CLUES  (2 pts each)

Questions 1–6: Use context clues to determine word and phrase meanings.

 

1.  [Context Clues — Direct Definition]  In paragraph one, the word "millennium" is immediately followed by the phrase "a period of one thousand years." What type of context clue is this, and what does it tell you about the Silk Road's duration?

DOK 1  ·  CRM A-1

▸ Tests recognition of parenthetical restatement as a context clue type.

A)  A contrast clue showing that a millennium is shorter than most people assume

B)  A direct definition/restatement clue embedded by the author; it tells us the Silk Road operated for one thousand years

C)  An example clue providing specific centuries that illustrate the word's meaning

D)  An inference clue requiring the reader to calculate the length of time from dates given elsewhere in the passage

2.  [Context Clues — Direct Definition]  Paragraph two defines "commodities" as "goods that are bought and sold." Based on this definition, which of the following would NOT be a commodity on the Silk Road?

DOK 1  ·  CRM A-1

▸ Tests application of an embedded definition to distinguish examples from non-examples.

A)  Silk fabric woven in Chinese workshops

B)  Cinnamon and pepper shipped from South Asia

C)  A religious belief adopted by travelers during a long journey

D)  Glassware produced by Roman craftsmen and sold to eastern buyers

3.  [Context Clues — Inference]  In paragraph two, the passage describes China's silk-making knowledge as "jealously guarded." Using context clues in the same paragraph—including the penalty for smuggling silkworm eggs—what does "jealously guarded" most precisely mean in this context?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests inference from behavioral consequences as context for an idiomatic phrase.

A)  Protected with intense possessiveness and enforced with severe consequences for anyone who attempted to steal or share it

B)  Hidden from the Chinese people themselves, who were not allowed to observe the silk-making process

C)  Guarded by jealous merchants who competed with each other for the profits of silk production

D)  Protected by Chinese soldiers who patrolled the borders to prevent silk from being exported

4.  [Context Clues — Inference]  Paragraph three states that spices "were sometimes used as currency—a medium of exchange accepted in place of money." Using this context, what does "medium of exchange" mean?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests parsing of an appositive definition with embedded subordination.

A)  A message carried between two trading partners to confirm the terms of a commercial agreement

B)  Something that both parties in a transaction agree to accept as payment, enabling trade without the use of coins or paper money

C)  A transportation method used to move valuable goods safely across long distances

D)  An intermediary merchant who negotiates between buyers and sellers who speak different languages

5.  [Context Clues — Inference]  In paragraph four, "dissemination" is used to describe how Islam spread across Central Asia. The passage also uses the words "spread" and "diffusion" in the same sentence to describe similar processes. Using these synonyms as context clues, what does "dissemination" most likely mean?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests use of adjacent synonyms within a single sentence as reciprocal context clues.

A)  The forced imposition of a religion on a conquered population through military means

B)  The gradual scattering or spreading of something—an idea, belief, or practice—across a wide area through contact and transmission

C)  The formal documentation of religious practices in manuscripts carried by merchants along trade routes

D)  The conversion of an entire population from one religion to another in a single historical event

6.  [Context Clues — Inference]  Paragraph five states that the Age of Exploration "rendered the ancient network obsolete." Using context clues in the same paragraph—particularly that maritime routes were "faster, cheaper, and capable of moving greater quantities"—what does "rendered obsolete" most precisely mean, and what does the word "rendered" add to the meaning of "made obsolete"?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests inference of a two-word phrase and the specific contribution of a causative verb.

A)  "Rendered obsolete" simply means "made old"; "rendered" and "made" are identical in meaning with no distinction

B)  "Rendered obsolete" means caused something to become outmoded and no longer useful or competitive; "rendered" (to cause something to become) adds the sense of an active transformation—the maritime routes actively caused the Silk Road's obsolescence rather than it simply aging on its own

C)  "Rendered obsolete" means permanently destroyed, indicating that the Silk Road ceased to exist as a physical network

D)  "Rendered" is a cooking term borrowed figuratively to suggest that the maritime routes melted down and dissolved the Silk Road's value

 

SECTION B — FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE  (2 pts each)

Questions 7–12: Identify and interpret metaphors, similes, irony, and figurative language structures.

 

7.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  Paragraph one describes the Silk Road as "a web of commercial and cultural exchange." What does the metaphor of a "web" communicate about the Silk Road's structure?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests interpretation of a structural metaphor.

A)  The Silk Road was fragile and could be destroyed by a single disruption to any of its connections

B)  The Silk Road was a network of interconnected, overlapping routes and relationships—not a single straight line—with each strand linked to and dependent on others, just as a spider's web is a system of interlocking threads rather than a single path

C)  The Silk Road was controlled by a central power, like a spider at the center of a web, that directed all trade

D)  The Silk Road was designed to trap and extract wealth from the civilizations connected to it, as a web traps insects

8.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  In paragraph three, the author writes that "ideas, mathematical systems, religious beliefs, and artistic styles crossed borders as invisibly as the wind." What does this simile emphasize about the movement of ideas compared to the movement of physical goods?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests comparison of figurative meaning for tangible vs. intangible commodities.

A)  Ideas were less valuable than physical goods because they could not be sold or taxed by governments

B)  Unlike physical goods—which could be tracked, taxed, seized, and counted—ideas moved silently, without record, and without the capacity to be stopped at borders; the simile emphasizes their intangibility and the impossibility of controlling their flow

C)  Ideas moved faster than physical goods because they did not require transportation by caravan or ship

D)  Ideas were dangerous, like wind, because they disrupted stable societies and caused political revolutions

9.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  Paragraph three describes the variety of Silk Road goods as "one thread in the vast tapestry of Silk Road exchange." Analyze this metaphor. What does calling silk "one thread" in a "tapestry" imply about silk's relative importance, and what does calling the overall exchange a "tapestry" imply about how its elements relate to one another?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests layered metaphor analysis—two embedded comparisons in a single figure.

A)  The metaphor implies that silk was the most valuable and central element, since a single thread can represent the entire cloth

B)  Calling silk "one thread" diminishes its importance relative to the whole—it is necessary but not sufficient; calling the exchange a "tapestry" implies that all the traded goods, ideas, and relationships were interwoven into a unified, intricate, and meaningful whole, with no single element able to represent the entirety

C)  The metaphor is purely decorative and carries no analytical meaning about the relative significance of silk

D)  The metaphor contradicts the passage's opening claim that the Silk Road earned its name from silk, since a single thread is trivial

10.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  The passage describes the Silk Road as both "a crucible of civilizational contact" (paragraph 4) and "the nervous system of the ancient world" (paragraph 6). Analyze both metaphors. What does each comparison add that the other does not?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests comparative analysis of two extended metaphors in the same passage.

A)  Both metaphors mean exactly the same thing—that the Silk Road was important—and are simply stylistic variations

B)  "Crucible" emphasizes transformation under intense conditions—a crucible is a vessel in which materials are heated and changed into something new—suggesting the Silk Road transformed the civilizations it connected; "nervous system" emphasizes communication, coordination, and interdependence—suggesting the Silk Road was what made the ancient world function as a connected whole rather than isolated parts. Together they capture both transformation and connectivity

C)  "Crucible" refers to the destructive aspects of the Silk Road (including the plague) while "nervous system" refers only to its positive cultural effects

D)  "Crucible" is a more accurate metaphor because the Silk Road primarily involved the mixing of material goods, while "nervous system" overstates its role as a communication network

11.  [Figurative Language — Irony/Understatement]  The author calls the name "Silk Road" a "misnomer," meaning an inaccurate or misleading name. What is ironic about the fact that historians still use this name centuries after recognizing it is technically inaccurate?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests recognition of historical irony embedded in factual content.

A)  There is no irony; historians use inaccurate names all the time without recognizing the problem

B)  The irony is that historians—people professionally committed to accuracy—continue to use a name they know to be misleading, suggesting that evocative and memorable language sometimes persists over more accurate terminology because it captures something true about the network's identity even when it misrepresents its contents

C)  The irony is that silk was the most important commodity, so the name is actually more accurate than historians admit

D)  There is no irony because "Silk Road" is now considered a technical term, not a descriptive name, and therefore its accuracy is irrelevant

12.  [Figurative Language — Synecdoche]  In the final paragraph, scholars say the Silk Road's true legacy is "proof that human beings have always sought connection across distance and difference." The word "distance" likely refers literally to geography. What might "difference" refer to figuratively in this context, given the passage's content?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests figurative extension of a word beyond its literal geographic reference.

A)  "Difference" refers exclusively to the different currencies used along the Silk Road, which made currency exchange necessary

B)  "Difference" extends to encompass language, religion, culture, political systems, and ethnicity—all the human variations that made the Silk Road's exchanges remarkable, since connecting people across those differences required not just physical routes but a willingness to trade with and learn from those profoundly unlike oneself

C)  "Difference" is a synonym for "distance" in this context, providing a rhythmic variation without additional meaning

D)  "Difference" refers to the economic inequalities between rich and poor nations that the Silk Road's trade system both reflected and reinforced

 

SECTION C — MULTIPLE MEANINGS  (2 pts each)

Questions 13–16: Select the contextually correct meaning of polysemous words.

 

13.  [Multiple Meanings]  The word "guarded" appears in "a skill and secrecy so jealously guarded." In different contexts, "guarded" can mean (1) protected by soldiers, (2) cautious and reserved in speech, or (3) carefully protected from disclosure. Which meaning is most active in this context?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests disambiguation of a word with physical, behavioral, and figurative senses.

A)  Protected by actual soldiers stationed at Chinese silk workshops around the clock

B)  Cautious and reserved, because Chinese silk workers refused to discuss their methods even in private

C)  Carefully protected from disclosure or discovery—the knowledge was maintained as a closely held secret, not merely physically secured

D)  Guarded by law, meaning the secrecy was encoded in Chinese legal statutes that criminalized disclosure

14.  [Multiple Meanings]  The word "conduit" in paragraph four ("not simply a conduit for material goods") comes from a Latin word meaning "to lead" or "to channel." In engineering, a conduit is a pipe or channel through which something flows. How does this physical meaning inform the word's figurative meaning in this context?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests etymology as a context clue for figurative meaning.

A)  The physical meaning is irrelevant; in this context "conduit" simply means "route" without any additional connotation

B)  The physical meaning of a pipe or channel informs the figurative use: the Silk Road is being described as a passive channel through which goods flowed—but the author immediately complicates this by saying it was more than that, introducing the contrast between a mere pipe and a "crucible" that actively transforms what passes through it

C)  The physical meaning indicates that the Silk Road included actual pipes and aqueducts used to transport liquid goods across Central Asia

D)  The etymological root "to lead" indicates the Silk Road was primarily a military supply route rather than a commercial one

15.  [Multiple Meanings]  In paragraph five, the word "control" appears in "The Ottoman Empire's control of overland routes." In different contexts, "control" can mean (1) physical domination through military force, (2) administrative oversight and regulation, or (3) the ability to set prices and conditions. Which meaning or combination of meanings is most appropriate in this context, and how does the specific meaning affect the reader's understanding of why European merchants found the routes "costly and dangerous"?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests application of multiple simultaneous senses of a polysemous word to contextual interpretation.

A)  Only the administrative meaning applies; the Ottomans simply issued trading licenses that European merchants found inconvenient

B)  All three meanings are simultaneously applicable: Ottoman control meant military authority over the physical routes, administrative power to regulate who could use them, and economic power to set tolls and tariffs—together making land-based Silk Road trade expensive (tolls), administratively cumbersome, and physically risky (military enforcement), which explains why maritime routes became more attractive

C)  Only the military meaning applies; the Ottomans blocked trade routes entirely through military force, making them impassable for European merchants

D)  "Control" here is figurative and means only that the Ottomans had a cultural and religious influence over the regions through which the Silk Road passed

16.  [Multiple Meanings]  In the final paragraph, the word "consequential" describes the exchange of ideas as "at least as consequential as the exchange of goods." The word can mean (1) important and significant, or (2) having notable consequences or effects. How do both meanings operate simultaneously in this sentence, and what does the word imply about the relationship between significance and effect?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests dual-meaning activation and their logical relationship within the sentence.

A)  Only the first meaning applies; the author is making a claim about importance, not about specific historical effects

B)  Both meanings operate simultaneously and reinforce each other: to call the exchange of ideas "consequential" is to claim both that it was important (worthy of attention) and that it had profound lasting effects on civilizations—the sentence implies that significance and historical consequence are inseparable, and that true importance is measured by what changes as a result

C)  Only the second meaning applies; the author is making a specific empirical claim about historical effects without any evaluative judgment about importance

D)  The two meanings of "consequential" contradict each other in this sentence, making the author's claim ambiguous and difficult to evaluate

 

SECTION D — CONNOTATION & TONE  (2 pts each)

Questions 17–20: Analyze how word choices create tone and carry connotative weight.

 

17.  [Connotation & Tone]  In paragraph four, the author describes the Black Death as "catastrophic" and its effects as killing "roughly one-third of Europe's population." Why does the author include this devastating detail in a passage that is primarily about trade and cultural exchange?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests understanding of connotative contrast—dark detail in an otherwise celebratory passage.

A)  To argue that the Silk Road was ultimately more harmful than beneficial and should be remembered primarily for the plague it spread

B)  To demonstrate with dark irony that trade routes are morally neutral conduits—they carry both civilization-building ideas and civilization-destroying diseases with equal efficiency—deepening the passage's central argument about the Silk Road's complexity and power

C)  To shift the passage's tone entirely toward tragedy for the final two paragraphs

D)  To provide historical balance by counterweighting the positive descriptions of silk and spice trade with a negative example

18.  [Connotation & Tone]  The author describes silk-making knowledge as "jealously guarded" rather than "carefully protected" or "kept secret." What does the word "jealously" add to the description?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests identification of emotional connotation layered onto a neutral concept.

A)  "Jealously" is a neutral synonym for "carefully" with no additional emotional weight

B)  "Jealously" adds a human psychological dimension—it suggests possessiveness, fear of losing something precious, and an almost irrational intensity of protection that goes beyond rational security measures; it makes the Chinese government's attitude feel emotionally charged rather than merely strategic

C)  "Jealously" implies the Chinese government was envious of other nations' products and protected silk in retaliation

D)  "Jealously" softens the description by suggesting that the protection was driven by insecurity rather than genuine confidence in silk's value

19.  [Connotation & Tone]  The final sentence of the passage calls the Silk Road "the nervous system of the ancient world." Consider the connotation of "nervous system" versus a simpler phrase like "the most important trade route." What does "nervous system" communicate that the simpler phrase does not?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests connotative comparison between figurative and literal descriptive language.

A)  "Nervous system" and "most important trade route" communicate the same basic claim; the difference is purely rhetorical

B)  "Nervous system" implies that the Silk Road was not merely one important feature of the ancient world but its fundamental connective infrastructure—the system without which no coordinated activity was possible, just as a body cannot function without its nervous system—elevating the Silk Road from a useful feature to an existential necessity

C)  "Nervous system" emphasizes that the Silk Road was primarily a communication network for transmitting information rather than a commercial system for trading goods

D)  "Nervous system" implies the Silk Road was fragile and vulnerable, because nervous systems can be damaged by injury—unlike the more robust infrastructure suggested by "most important trade route"

20.  [Connotation & Tone]  The author opens the passage with "Long before the age of container ships, fiber-optic cables, or intercontinental air travel, human beings found a way to connect the world." Analyze the tonal effect of beginning with the phrase "Long before." What attitude toward the Silk Road does this opening establish?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests recognition of temporal framing as a tonal and connotative device.

A)  It establishes a tone of scientific neutrality, simply placing the Silk Road chronologically before modern technologies

B)  It establishes a tone of admiration and wonder—by invoking all the sophisticated modern technologies that facilitate global connection and then saying humans achieved something comparable long before any of these tools existed, the author frames the Silk Road as a remarkable achievement that deserves to be understood on its own terms rather than dismissed as primitive

C)  It establishes a tone of nostalgia, implying that the Silk Road era was superior to the modern age of technology

D)  It establishes a skeptical tone, suggesting the author doubts whether the Silk Road actually achieved the global connections that modern technologies make possible

 

SECTION E — SHORT ANSWER  (10 pts each)

DOK 3–4  |  CRM C-3 / D-4  |  Complete sentences. Direct textual citation required.

 

21.  [Figurative Language — Analysis]  The passage uses three distinct metaphors to describe the Silk Road: a "web," a "tapestry," and a "nervous system." Each metaphor emphasizes a different quality. Identify what specific quality of the Silk Road each metaphor highlights. Then evaluate: which of the three metaphors do you find most accurate and illuminating, and why? (DOK 3 | CRM C-3)

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

 

 

 

 

 

 

22.  [Connotation — Evaluation]  The author writes that the Black Death "also traveled the Silk Road, carried in the bodies of rodents aboard merchant caravans, demonstrating with terrible clarity that trade routes carry everything that travels with traders." Analyze the phrase "with terrible clarity." What does "terrible clarity" mean? Why does the author describe the clarity as "terrible" rather than simply saying the plague demonstrated something important? What does this specific word choice reveal about the author's attitude toward the Silk Road and its consequences? (DOK 4 | CRM D-4)

DOK 4  ·  CRM D-4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SECTION F — EXTENDED RESPONSE  (20 pts)

DOK Level 4  |  CRM D-4  |  Minimum 10 sentences.

 

23.  [Vocabulary & Figurative Language — Synthesis]  The author uses the word "misnomer" in paragraph one to establish that "Silk Road" is an inaccurate name. Yet the passage then uses a series of figurative metaphors—web, tapestry, crucible, nervous system—to describe the same network. In a well-organized extended response: (1) explain the irony of criticizing the Silk Road's name as a "misnomer" while then using multiple figurative metaphors that are also literally inaccurate; (2) analyze how each major metaphor in the passage contributes to a specific aspect of the author's argument; (3) evaluate whether figurative language or precise vocabulary is more effective for communicating the Silk Road's significance; and (4) construct your own metaphor for the Silk Road that captures something none of the existing metaphors do, and defend your choice.

DOK 4  ·  CRM D-4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SECTION G — VOCABULARY JOURNAL  (4 pts each × 5 words)

Select FIVE challenging words or phrases. For each: write the passage sentence; explain meaning from context; write your own original sentence.

 

Word 1:

Word / Phrase: ___________________________________________

Sentence from passage:

Meaning from context:

My original sentence:

Word 2:

Word / Phrase: ___________________________________________

Sentence from passage:

Meaning from context:

My original sentence:

Word 3:

Word / Phrase: ___________________________________________

Sentence from passage:

Meaning from context:

My original sentence:

Word 4:

Word / Phrase: ___________________________________________

Sentence from passage:

Meaning from context:

My original sentence:

Word 5:

Word / Phrase: ___________________________________________

Sentence from passage:

Meaning from context:

My original sentence:

 

ASSESSMENT SCORING GUIDE

Section

Points Possible

Points Earned

DOK Level

CRM Cell

Sec A: Context Clues MC (×6)

12

___

1–3

A-1 / B-2 / C-3

Sec B: Figurative Language MC (×6)

12

___

2–3

B-2 / C-3

Sec C: Multiple Meanings MC (×4)

8

___

2–3

B-2 / C-3

Sec D: Connotation & Tone MC (×4)

8

___

3

C-3

Sec E: Short Answer (×2)

20

___

3–4

C-3 / D-4

Sec F: Extended Response

20

___

4

D-4

Sec G: Vocabulary Journal

20

___

2

B-2

TOTAL

100

___


 Main Idea & Key Details Assessment Series — ANSWER KEY & SCORING GUIDE  |  Grades 3–8  |  Teacher Use Only

 

Grade 3 — The Underground Railroad

 

Section A — Key Details MC (Questions 1–5):

Q1: B

Q2: C

Q3: B

Q4: C

Q5: B

Section B — Main Idea / Theme MC (Questions 6–10):

Q6: A

Q7: C

Q8: B

Q9: B

Q10: B

Section F — Vocabulary (Questions 14–15):

Q14: B

Q15: C

Open-Response Scoring: Apply DOK/CRM Rubric below.

 

Grade 4 — The Dust Bowl

 

Section A — Key Details MC (Questions 1–5):

Q1: B

Q2: A

Q3: B

Q4: C

Q5: B

Section B — Main Idea / Theme MC (Questions 6–10):

Q6: B

Q7: C

Q8: B

Q9: B

Q10: B

Section F — Vocabulary (Questions 14–15):

Q14: B

Q15: B

Open-Response Scoring: Apply DOK/CRM Rubric below.

 

Grade 5 — Gutenberg's Printing Press

 

Section A — Key Details MC (Questions 1–5):

Q1: B

Q2: C

Q3: B

Q4: B

Q5: B

Section B — Main Idea / Theme MC (Questions 6–10):

Q6: B

Q7: B

Q8: B

Q9: B

Q10: B

Section F — Vocabulary (Questions 14–15):

Q14: C

Q15: B

Open-Response Scoring: Apply DOK/CRM Rubric below.

 

Grade 6 — The Columbian Exchange

 

Section A — Key Details MC (Questions 1–5):

Q1: B

Q2: C

Q3: B

Q4: B

Q5: B

Section B — Main Idea / Theme MC (Questions 6–10):

Q6: B

Q7: A

Q8: B

Q9: B

Q10: B

Section F — Vocabulary (Questions 14–15):

Q14: B

Q15: B

Open-Response Scoring: Apply DOK/CRM Rubric below.

 

Grade 7 — Women's Suffrage

 

Section A — Key Details MC (Questions 1–5):

Q1: B

Q2: B

Q3: B

Q4: B

Q5: B

Section B — Main Idea / Theme MC (Questions 6–10):

Q6: B

Q7: B

Q8: B

Q9: B

Q10: B

Section F — Vocabulary (Questions 14–15):

Q14: B

Q15: C

Open-Response Scoring: Apply DOK/CRM Rubric below.

 

Grade 8 — The Space Race

 

Section A — Key Details MC (Questions 1–5):

Q1: B

Q2: B

Q3: B

Q4: B

Q5: B

Section B — Main Idea / Theme MC (Questions 6–10):

Q6: B

Q7: B

Q8: B

Q9: B

Q10: B

Section F — Vocabulary (Questions 14–15):

Q14: C

Q15: B

Open-Response Scoring: Apply DOK/CRM Rubric below.

 

DOK / CRM Open-Response Rubric

 

Score

DOK

Summary / Key Detail Accuracy

Main Idea / Theme Analysis

Register & Citation

18–20

4 — Extended

Complete, precise, text-specific; no omissions

Evaluates; synthesizes across multiple paragraphs

Tier 3 vocabulary; formal register; cited accurately

14–17

3 — Strategic

Mostly accurate; minor omissions

Analytical; explains rather than retells

Tier 2; generally formal; partial citations

9–13

2 — Skills

Partially accurate; some paraphrase errors

Some analysis; mixes summary and interpretation

Mixed register; general references to text

0–8

1 — Recall

Inaccurate or absent

Retelling only; no analytical claim

Informal; no textual evidence

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you!