

An Accidental Toy
Presentation
•
English
•
5th Grade
•
Hard
+24
Standards-aligned
AILEEN MAHON
Used 631+ times
FREE Resource
2 Slides • 8 Questions
1
An Accidental Toy
​

2

You can open this webpage in a new tab.
3
Multiple Choice
Wright’s invention was originally intended for —
Military use
children
physical therapy
astronauts
4
Multiple Choice
The author presents the ideas in paragraphs 2 through 5 in chronological order so that the reader will better understand —
how a failed invention became popular when it was given a new purpose
how an engineer mixed different chemicals to produce an invention
the process an engineer followed to invent a product for the government
the best way to market an invention as a toy
5
Multiple Choice
What can the reader conclude about Peter Hodgson based on information in the selection?
He purchased several toys from different companies.
He saw the possibilities for something that others did not.
He searched for new inventions by reading magazines.
He believed that mistakes often lead to important discoveries.
6
Multiple Choice
What is the meaning of the word properties in paragraph 6?
Creators
Solutions
Qualities
Customers
7
Multiple Choice
Based on the ideas presented in the selection, what can the reader conclude about Silly Putty?
It is used today by more adults than children.
Copying ink images is the most valuable of its uses.
For about 70 years it has been the most popular toy on the market
It has gained new uses over the years.
8
Multiple Choice
Which of these statements best summarizes the section titled “Stretching into Success”?
When Peter Hodgson purchased the rights to make the putty, he decided to call it Silly Putty.
Peter Hodgson learned of an invention, named it Silly Putty, and used his experience to successfully advertise it.
Peter Hodgson realized that children around the country would like the putty if he came up with a good name for it.
To help make James Wright’s invention popular, Peter Hodgson wanted to give more people the opportunity to know about it.
9
Multiple Choice
From the information presented in paragraph 2, the reader can conclude that Wright’s invention —
cost more to make than the government was willing to pay
required chemicals that were difficult to get
displayed characteristics that he did not expect
was the reason he was offered a job in the laboratory
10
Multiple Choice
The author’s main purpose in writing the selection is to —
encourage the reader to think of clever uses for a product
inform the reader about the invention and uses of an interesting product
describe some creative ways of promoting a new product
explain how to develop an invention
An Accidental Toy
​

Show answer
Auto Play
Slide 1 / 10
SLIDE
Similar Resources on Wayground
8 questions
Live Lesson: Summarizing Non-Fiction
Presentation
•
4th - 5th Grade
8 questions
What is a Sentence?
Presentation
•
4th - 5th Grade
8 questions
Main Idea Passage Practice
Presentation
•
5th Grade
7 questions
Formal and Informal Language
Presentation
•
4th Grade
6 questions
Predator-Prey
Presentation
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Prepositions
Presentation
•
5th - 6th Grade
8 questions
Grammar- Present perfect tense
Presentation
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Prefix and Suffix
Presentation
•
5th Grade
Popular Resources on Wayground
20 questions
STAAR Review Quiz #3
Quiz
•
8th Grade
20 questions
Equivalent Fractions
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
6 questions
Marshmallow Farm Quiz
Quiz
•
2nd - 5th Grade
20 questions
Main Idea and Details
Quiz
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Inferences
Quiz
•
4th Grade
19 questions
Classifying Quadrilaterals
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
12 questions
What makes Nebraska's government unique?
Quiz
•
4th - 5th Grade
Discover more resources for English
20 questions
Main Idea and Details
Quiz
•
5th Grade
12 questions
Figurative Language Review
Interactive video
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Poetry
Quiz
•
5th Grade
10 questions
Summarizing
Quiz
•
3rd - 5th Grade
14 questions
Commas, Commas, Commas
Quiz
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Character perspective, theme, summarize, author's purpose
Quiz
•
5th Grade
50 questions
ELAR Review / STAAR practice
Quiz
•
4th - 6th Grade
21 questions
Figurative language review
Quiz
•
5th Grade