Reading Topics

Sunday, June 7, 2026

GRADE 5 Reading Test VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT with Answer Key

 Reading Comprehension Assessment Series 

GRADE 5

VOCABULARY IN CONTEXT

The Harlem Renaissance: Blossoming, Crucible & Reverberation

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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 5  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. Study the table, then read the passage and annotate as you go.

 

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 and annotate carefully—underline unfamiliar words, circle context clues, and note figurative language. The category label in brackets on each question identifies the specific vocabulary skill being tested. Written responses require formal academic register, complete sentences, and direct textual citation.

 

PASSAGE: THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE — EFFLORESCENCE, REBUTTAL & ENDURING RESONANCE

 

Between approximately 1920 and 1940, a remarkable cultural efflorescence—a sudden, vibrant blossoming of artistic, intellectual, and social activity—transformed the Harlem neighborhood of New York City into the epicenter of African American creative life. Dubbed the Harlem Renaissance by historians and participants alike, this period saw an extraordinary outpouring of literature, music, visual art, and political thought that permanently altered America's cultural landscape and challenged, with elegant and uncompromising force, the racial assumptions that had governed American society since Reconstruction.

The Harlem Renaissance was fueled, in part, by the Great Migration—the mass movement of millions of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North between 1910 and 1970. Escaping the brutal regime of Jim Crow laws—segregation statutes that enforced racial hierarchy through legal and extralegal violence—Black Americans arrived in Harlem and other Northern cities seeking freedom, economic opportunity, and the space to build communities and institutions on their own terms. Harlem became, in the words of writer and philosopher Alain Locke, the "race capital of America"—not merely a neighborhood but a symbolic capital of Black aspiration and possibility.

The literary voice of the Renaissance was multitudinous, or many-voiced, but several figures defined its contours. Langston Hughes, whose poetry married the rhythms of jazz and blues to the cadences of formal verse, created a vernacular literature—a literature rooted in everyday speech and popular culture—that gave lyric expression to the textures of Black urban life. Zora Neale Hurston, an anthropologist and novelist whose work was grounded in the folk traditions of the Black South, argued that African American culture possessed its own beauty, complexity, and validity that required no apology or justification to a white audience.

The visual arts of the Renaissance were equally transformative. Aaron Douglas, often called the father of African American art, developed a distinctive visual language that fused African artistic traditions with the geometric abstraction of European modernism—creating images of Black life and history that were simultaneously rooted and cosmopolitan. His murals and illustrations for magazines such as The Crisis and Opportunity brought Black visual art into homes and communities across the country.

The Renaissance also served as a crucible for political debate. W.E.B. Du Bois, editor of The Crisis and co-founder of the NAACP, argued that art and literature could serve as instruments of political liberation—that beautiful and accomplished Black art was, in itself, a rebuttal to the dehumanizing logic of white supremacy. His vision of the "Talented Tenth"—an educated African American elite whose cultural achievements would uplift the entire race—stood in productive tension with the more populist philosophy of Marcus Garvey, who argued that Black liberation required not cultural elevation but economic self-sufficiency and political sovereignty.

The Harlem Renaissance did not end racism in America. Its promise was real but its reach was limited; many of its greatest figures died in poverty or obscurity, and the Great Depression eventually drained the economic patronage that had sustained it. Yet its reverberations—the vocabulary it created, the images it circulated, the arguments it initiated—continued to shape Black artistic and political life throughout the twentieth century and into the present.

 

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 "efflorescence" is immediately followed by the phrase "a sudden, vibrant blossoming of artistic, intellectual, and social activity." What type of context clue is this, and what does it reveal about the Harlem Renaissance?

DOK 1  ·  CRM A-1

▸ Tests recognition of appositive definition.

A)  An antonym clue showing what the Renaissance was not

B)  A direct restatement/appositive clue; it reveals the Renaissance was a sudden and vibrant explosion of creative energy across multiple artistic and intellectual fields

C)  An example clue listing specific artistic works that illustrate the term

D)  An inference clue requiring the reader to synthesize information from multiple paragraphs

2.  [Context Clues — Direct Definition]  Paragraph two identifies Jim Crow laws as "segregation statutes that enforced racial hierarchy through legal and extralegal violence." Using this definition, which statement accurately describes Jim Crow laws?

DOK 1  ·  CRM A-1

▸ Tests transfer of embedded definition.

A)  Jim Crow laws were informal community customs with no legal standing in state or federal courts

B)  Jim Crow laws were formally enacted legal statutes that enforced racial separation and hierarchy, and were backed both by official law enforcement and by extralegal violence that operated outside and beneath the law

C)  Jim Crow laws were exclusively economic regulations that restricted African Americans' access to employment and property ownership

D)  Jim Crow laws applied only in the North because Southern states had abolished legal segregation after Reconstruction

3.  [Context Clues — Inference]  Paragraph three describes Langston Hughes as creating "vernacular literature—a literature rooted in everyday speech and popular culture." Based on this definition, which of the following would be an example of vernacular literature?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests inference from embedded synonym pair.

A)  A formal academic treatise on the history of jazz written for a university audience in technical musicological language

B)  A poem written in the rhythm and speech patterns of jazz music, using the words and images of everyday Black urban life in 1920s Harlem

C)  A Latin translation of classical Greek poetry adapted for use in university literature courses

D)  A formal novel written in the style of nineteenth-century European realism without reference to African American speech or culture

4.  [Context Clues — Inference]  In paragraph four, Aaron Douglas's work is described as "simultaneously rooted and cosmopolitan." Using context clues in the same sentence—which describes his work as "fusing African artistic traditions with the geometric abstraction of European modernism"—what does "cosmopolitan" most likely mean?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests inference from context without explicit definition.

A)  Expensive and prestigious, appealing only to wealthy art collectors in major urban centers

B)  Belonging to or drawing from multiple world cultures and traditions, not limited to a single national or ethnic artistic heritage

C)  Politically progressive and committed to international causes of racial and economic justice

D)  Produced in a large city, as opposed to the rural folk traditions that characterized earlier African American art

5.  [Context Clues — Inference]  In paragraph five, Du Bois argues that accomplished Black art was "a rebuttal to the dehumanizing logic of white supremacy." Using this context, what does "rebuttal" mean?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests inference from logical relationship.

A)  A formal legal argument presented in court against a specific criminal accusation

B)  A counter-argument or evidence that directly contradicts and challenges an opposing claim—in this case, Black artistic achievement refuting the claim that Black people were intellectually or culturally inferior

C)  A public apology offered by one group to another in acknowledgment of historical wrongdoing

D)  A violent protest action taken in response to unjust laws or social conditions

6.  [Context Clues — Inference]  The final paragraph states the Renaissance's "promise was real but its reach was limited." What does the contrast between "promise" and "reach" communicate about the Renaissance's impact, and how does the specific word "reach" add to the meaning of "impact" or "effect"?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests inference of evaluative phrase from contrast context.

A)  "Reach" and "effect" are synonymous; the sentence simply means the Renaissance had some positive and some negative consequences

B)  The contrast between "promise" (what it could have achieved) and "reach" (how far its actual effects extended) distinguishes aspiration from realization; "reach" adds the specific idea of geographic and social extension—the Renaissance's ideas and art could not penetrate all the communities or institutions it aspired to transform

C)  "Reach" implies that the Renaissance's physical artwork did not travel beyond New York City

D)  The contrast suggests the Renaissance was a complete failure because its promise was never realized in any meaningful way

 

SECTION B — FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE  (2 pts each)

Questions 7–12: Identify and interpret metaphors, similes, irony, personification, and allusion.

 

7.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  Alain Locke called Harlem the "race capital of America." What does the metaphor of Harlem as a "capital" communicate that simply calling it an important neighborhood would not?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests interpretation of geographic metaphor.

A)  It implies Harlem was officially recognized by the federal government as the political headquarters of African American civic organizations

B)  It suggests Harlem was the symbolic and administrative center of Black American life—the place where cultural, political, and intellectual authority resided, and from which ideas and movements radiated outward across the country, just as a national capital is the seat from which national life is organized and represented

C)  It implies Harlem had the largest population of any African American community in the United States

D)  It means Locke believed Harlem would eventually become an independent political entity with its own government

8.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  The passage uses the word "efflorescence" (blossoming) and later describes the Renaissance as generating "reverberations." What do these two metaphors—one from botany, one from acoustics—together suggest about the nature of the Renaissance's impact?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests figurative reading of biological metaphor.

A)  Together they suggest the Renaissance was both a natural and an engineered phenomenon

B)  The botanical metaphor (blossoming) suggests the Renaissance was a sudden, organic, and beautiful eruption of life; the acoustic metaphor (reverberations) suggests its effects did not stop at its moment of greatest intensity but continued to echo, resonate, and shape subsequent history long after the original sound had faded—together characterizing the Renaissance as both a vivid event and an enduring force

C)  Both metaphors suggest the Renaissance was temporary and quickly forgotten after the Great Depression ended its cultural patronage

D)  The botanical metaphor implies fragility; the acoustic metaphor implies power; together they suggest the Renaissance was contradictory in its nature

9.  [Figurative Language — Personification/Metaphor]  Du Bois argued that art and literature could serve as "instruments of political liberation." Analyze this metaphor. What does the word "instruments" suggest about Du Bois's view of art's relationship to politics?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests analysis of a contested figurative phrase.

A)  "Instruments" suggests art was merely decorative and served only an aesthetic function in the political struggle

B)  "Instruments" (tools or implements designed to accomplish a specific purpose) frames art not as an end in itself but as a purposeful means toward a political goal—liberation. This is a significant ideological claim: it argues that beauty and political efficacy are not separate but that artistic excellence can itself be a political act, doing work that speeches or legislation cannot

C)  "Instruments" suggests Du Bois believed art should be subordinated to politics and judged solely on its political usefulness rather than its aesthetic quality

D)  "Instruments" refers literally to musical instruments, reflecting the centrality of jazz and blues to Du Bois's vision of Black cultural liberation

10.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor]  The passage describes the Renaissance as a "crucible for political debate" (paragraph 5). Previously in this series, the Silk Road was also called a "crucible." Evaluate: does the crucible metaphor work as well for political debate as it does for cultural exchange? What specific quality of a crucible—intense heat, transformation, containment—is most relevant to political debate?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests evaluation of metaphorical precision.

A)  The crucible metaphor is less effective for political debate because political ideas cannot literally be melted or transformed

B)  The metaphor works effectively for political debate primarily through the quality of intense heat—political debate in the Renaissance was conducted under conditions of extreme pressure (racial oppression, economic precarity, existential stakes) that forced competing ideas into direct confrontation with each other, generating the friction necessary for transformation; the Du Bois/Garvey tension is precisely the kind of high-stakes intellectual collision a crucible implies

C)  The crucible metaphor is more effective for the Silk Road because the Silk Road actually mixed physical goods together, while political debate only mixes ideas

D)  The crucible metaphor does not work for political debate because a crucible produces a unified substance, whereas political debate in the Renaissance remained unresolved between Du Bois and Garvey

11.  [Figurative Language — Metaphor/Paradox]  The passage describes Du Bois's "Talented Tenth" and Garvey's philosophy as standing "in productive tension" with each other. The phrase "productive tension" is paradoxical because tension usually implies conflict and discomfort, not productivity. What does the phrase "productive tension" imply about the relationship between competing ideas?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests analysis of paradoxical phrase.

A)  It implies that Du Bois and Garvey eventually resolved their differences and worked together on a unified political program

B)  It implies that the conflict between their ideas, though real and unresolved, was generative—that the friction between competing visions of liberation produced a richer and more complex political conversation than either vision alone could have generated, making the disagreement itself valuable rather than merely destructive

C)  It implies that their tension was only apparent and that their philosophies were more similar than different beneath the surface

D)  It suggests the author is uncertain which philosophy was more productive and uses "tension" to avoid taking a position

12.  [Figurative Language — Extended Metaphor]  The passage opens with the metaphor of "efflorescence" (blossoming) but closes by noting that many Renaissance figures "died in poverty or obscurity." How does this closing detail function in relation to the opening botanical metaphor?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests identification of metaphor that contradicts or qualifies another.

A)  It contradicts the botanical metaphor entirely, proving that the "blossoming" description was inaccurate and overly optimistic

B)  It extends and darkens the botanical metaphor: flowers bloom brilliantly but also wither; the closing detail adds the dimension of natural decline to the earlier image of natural flourishing, suggesting that the Renaissance was as subject to cycles of growth and decay as any living thing—beautiful, genuine, and ultimately mortal

C)  It suggests the author regrets using the efflorescence metaphor and is attempting to correct it in the final paragraph

D)  It is unrelated to the botanical metaphor and serves only as a historical corrective to hagiographic accounts of Renaissance figures

 

SECTION C — MULTIPLE MEANINGS  (2 pts each)

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

 

13.  [Multiple Meanings]  In paragraph three, "several figures defined its contours." The word "contours" can mean (1) the outline or shape of a physical object, (2) the distinctive features or character of something complex, or (3) a line on a map representing elevation. Which meaning fits this context?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests disambiguation of "contours."

A)  The physical outline meaning, because the Renaissance was confined to a specific geographic area of Harlem

B)  The distinctive features/character meaning—the figures "defined the contours" means they shaped and characterized what the Renaissance looked, sounded, and stood for, giving form and definition to its identity

C)  The cartographic meaning, because the Renaissance is being mapped geographically across New York

D)  All three meanings apply equally, and the sentence is intentionally ambiguous

14.  [Multiple Meanings]  The final paragraph references "economic patronage" that sustained the Renaissance. In different contexts, "patronage" can mean (1) financial support given to artists or institutions, (2) the customers of a business, or (3) political appointments given as favors. Which meaning is most active here?

DOK 2  ·  CRM B-2

▸ Tests disambiguation of "patronage."

A)  Political appointment—the Renaissance was sustained by government jobs given to Black artists

B)  Financial support given to artists and cultural institutions—publishers, magazines, foundations, and wealthy individuals funded the writers, musicians, and visual artists of the Renaissance

C)  Customers of a business—Black consumers supported the Renaissance by purchasing its products

D)  All three meanings are equally relevant because the passage discusses politics, economics, and art simultaneously

15.  [Multiple Meanings]  Zora Neale Hurston argued that African American culture "possessed its own beauty, complexity, and validity." In different contexts, "validity" can mean (1) logical soundness of an argument, (2) legal legitimacy, or (3) the quality of being justified, meaningful, and worthy of recognition. Which meaning is most active here, and why does Hurston's claim require this specific meaning?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests polysemy of "validity."

A)  Logical soundness, because Hurston was making a philosophical argument about the internal logic of African American folk traditions

B)  Justified worthiness—Hurston was asserting that African American culture had inherent value and deserved recognition on its own terms, without needing to meet external standards set by white audiences; this meaning is most active because it addresses a claim about cultural worth and dignity, not about formal logic or legal status

C)  Legal legitimacy, because Hurston was challenging laws that denied African Americans their cultural property rights

D)  All three meanings are simultaneously active because Hurston's argument operates on philosophical, legal, and cultural levels simultaneously

16.  [Multiple Meanings]  Du Bois's "Talented Tenth" was conceived as an elite whose achievements would "uplift the entire race." The word "uplift" can mean (1) to raise physically, (2) to improve the social or economic condition of a group, or (3) to inspire or elevate emotionally or spiritually. Which combination of meanings is most operative in Du Bois's use of the term, and what does the layered meaning reveal about his theory?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests polysemy of "uplift."

A)  Only the social/economic meaning applies; Du Bois was exclusively concerned with improving material conditions through access to professional employment and higher education

B)  The social/economic and spiritual/emotional meanings work together: Du Bois believed that Black cultural achievement would simultaneously improve the material conditions of African Americans (by demonstrating their capacity for equal participation in civic life) and elevate their spiritual and psychological dignity (by refuting dehumanizing narratives); the physical "lift" meaning provides the underlying metaphor that gives the term its force

C)  Only the spiritual/inspirational meaning applies; Du Bois was primarily a philosopher of culture with no interest in economic or political transformation

D)  The term "uplift" is purely ironic—Du Bois uses it to critique the elitist assumption that some Black people must be raised above others

 

SECTION D — CONNOTATION & TONE  (2 pts each)

Questions 17–20: Analyze how specific word choices shape the passage's tone and meaning.

 

17.  [Connotation & Tone]  The passage describes the Renaissance as challenging racial assumptions "with elegant and uncompromising force." What does the combination of "elegant" and "uncompromising" communicate that either word alone would not?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests connotation of "uncompromising."

A)  "Elegant" and "uncompromising" are near-synonyms that together simply mean the challenge was effective

B)  Together they create a paradoxical portrait of the Renaissance's power: "elegant" suggests beauty, refinement, and artistry; "uncompromising" suggests absolute refusal to make concessions or soften the challenge; the combination implies the Renaissance was powerful not despite its beauty but through it—its elegance was itself a form of uncompromising assertion

C)  "Elegant" softens "uncompromising," suggesting the Renaissance challenged racism politely and without causing offense to white audiences

D)  "Uncompromising" contradicts "elegant," creating a logical tension the author never resolves

18.  [Connotation & Tone]  The passage states the Harlem Renaissance "permanently altered America's cultural landscape." What does the word "permanently" add to the claim that the author could not achieve by writing "significantly changed"?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests tone of "permanently altered."

A)  "Permanently" is an overstatement that weakens the claim by making it impossible to verify

B)  "Permanently" forecloses the possibility of reversal or return to a prior condition—it claims not that the Renaissance made an important change but that it made an irreversible one, establishing a one-way threshold in American cultural history; "significantly changed" leaves open the possibility that the change could be undone

C)  "Permanently" and "significantly changed" are synonymous in historical writing and carry the same evidential weight

D)  "Permanently" strengthens the claim by quantifying exactly how long the change has lasted

19.  [Connotation & Tone]  The author describes the Renaissance's literary voice as "multitudinous, or many-voiced." Why might the author prefer "multitudinous" to the simpler word "diverse"?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests connotation of "multitudinous."

A)  "Multitudinous" is a more precise scientific term than "diverse" and therefore more appropriate for a passage about cultural history

B)  "Multitudinous" carries connotations of overwhelming abundance and number—a vast, surging multiplicity—that "diverse" does not; "diverse" implies variety without implying quantity or intensity, while "multitudinous" suggests a voice that is not merely varied but proliferating, pouring forth from countless sources simultaneously

C)  "Multitudinous" and "diverse" are synonymous; the choice is purely aesthetic

D)  "Multitudinous" is more politically appropriate because "diverse" has become an overused term in contemporary discourse

20.  [Connotation & Tone]  The final paragraph states the Renaissance's "reverberations . . . continued to shape Black artistic and political life throughout the twentieth century and into the present." What does the word "reverberations" imply about the Renaissance's relationship to the present moment that a word like "effects" or "influence" would not?

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

▸ Tests tone of closing paragraph.

A)  "Reverberations," "effects," and "influence" are synonymous in this context; the distinction is purely stylistic

B)  "Reverberations" (the continued echoing of a sound after its source has ceased) implies that the Renaissance is not merely historically influential but still actively resonating—that its sounds have not faded but continue to be heard in the present, suggesting an intimacy with the contemporary moment that "effects" (past causation) and "influence" (one thing shaping another) do not capture

C)  "Reverberations" implies the Renaissance's impact was primarily auditory, reflecting the centrality of music in the movement

D)  "Reverberations" weakens the claim by implying the Renaissance's impact is merely an echo—diminished and distorted—rather than direct and powerful

 

SECTION E — SHORT ANSWER  (10 pts each)

DOK 3–4  |  CRM C-3 / D-4  |  Complete sentences and specific textual evidence required.

 

21.  [Figurative Language — Analysis]  The passage uses two contrasting spatial metaphors: Harlem as a "capital" and the Renaissance's artistic output as "reverberations." One metaphor emphasizes centrality and authority; the other emphasizes sound and persistence. Analyze what each metaphor reveals about a different dimension of the Renaissance's significance. Then evaluate: which metaphor do you find more illuminating about what made the Harlem Renaissance historically important? (DOK 3 | CRM C-3)

DOK 3  ·  CRM C-3

 

 

 

 

 

 

22.  [Connotation / Word Choice — Evaluation]  Du Bois describes accomplished Black art as "a rebuttal to the dehumanizing logic of white supremacy." The word "dehumanizing" is doing significant work in this sentence. Define "dehumanizing" using context clues. Then analyze: why is it important that Du Bois calls white supremacy's logic "dehumanizing" rather than simply "wrong" or "unjust"? What does this specific word choice reveal about Du Bois's understanding of what racism actually does to its targets? (DOK 4 | CRM D-4)

DOK 4  ·  CRM D-4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SECTION F — EXTENDED RESPONSE  (20 pts)

DOK Level 4  |  CRM D-4  |  Minimum 10–14 sentences. Formal academic register.

 

23.  [Vocabulary & Figurative Language — Synthesis]  The passage uses figurative language rooted in three different domains: botany (efflorescence, blossoming), acoustics (reverberations), and architecture/geography (capital, crucible, landscape). In a well-organized extended response: (1) explain what each domain of figurative language contributes to the passage's meaning that the other domains do not; (2) analyze how the author's decision to borrow language from nature, sound, and built space creates a richer portrait of the Renaissance than any single domain could achieve; (3) evaluate which figurative domain is most effective for characterizing a cultural movement and defend your position; and (4) identify one aspect of the Harlem Renaissance that no existing metaphor in the passage captures, and propose your own figurative language to describe it.

DOK 4  ·  CRM D-4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

Select FIVE challenging words or phrases from the passage. For each: write the passage sentence, explain the meaning from context, and write your own original sentence using the word correctly.

 

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

 

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