Icarus's Flight

Icarus's Flight

7th Grade

10 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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Icarus's Flight

Icarus's Flight

Assessment

Quiz

English

7th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

CCSS
RL.7.4, RL.6.2, RL.7.10

+14

Standards-aligned

Created by

Kendra Webb

Used 371+ times

FREE Resource

About this resource

This quiz focuses on literary analysis and interpretation of a poem that reimagines the classical myth of Icarus. Designed for 7th grade students, the assessment evaluates students' ability to analyze poetic devices, identify themes, understand author's purpose, and interpret meaning beyond literal comprehension. Students must demonstrate mastery of advanced reading comprehension skills including identifying central messages, analyzing how poets use language to create tone and mood, understanding structural choices like enjambment across stanzas, and recognizing how punctuation affects meaning and pacing. The questions require students to move beyond surface-level understanding to examine the poet's deliberate choices in language, structure, and perspective, particularly how this contemporary interpretation challenges the traditional moral lesson of the Icarus myth by presenting his flight as a quest for wisdom rather than mere recklessness. Created by Kendra Webb, an English teacher in the US who teaches grade 7. This assessment serves multiple instructional purposes in the English Language Arts classroom, functioning effectively as a post-reading comprehension check, formative assessment tool, or homework assignment following a unit on mythology or poetry analysis. Teachers can use this quiz to gauge students' understanding of complex literary concepts before moving to more challenging texts, or as review material when preparing students for standardized assessments that require similar analytical thinking skills. The quiz aligns with Common Core State Standards RL.7.2 (determining theme and analyzing its development), RL.7.4 (analyzing impact of word choice on meaning and tone), RL.7.5 (analyzing how text structure contributes to meaning), and RL.7.6 (analyzing how an author develops point of view), making it an excellent tool for measuring student progress toward these essential seventh-grade reading literature standards.

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10 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which statement best describes the message of the poem?

Icarus flew too far for no good reason.

Icarus learned something by flying too far.

Icarus had a habit of flying too far.

Icarus was excited by flying too far.

Tags

CCSS.RL.6.4

CCSS.RL.7.10

CCSS.RL.7.4

CCSS.RL.7.5

CCSS.RL.8.10

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

In these lines the poet puts a question mark before the end of the line.


What else could the boy have done?

But how could he appreciate his freedom without knowing the exact point where freedom stopped?

Would it have been better to flutter ignorantly from petal to petal within some garden forever?

Should it matter that neither shepherd nor farmer with his plow watched him fall?


The poet does this to -

Make the reader pause.

Create randomness.

Exclaim a thought loudly.

Reverse the meaning of the line.

Tags

CCSS.RL.7.10

CCSS.RL.7.4

CCSS.RL.7.5

CCSS.RL.8.10

CCSS.RL.8.5

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Reread this first line of the poem.


Which sentence best describes the poet's purpose for beginning the poem this way?

He wants to criticize Icarus.

He wants to establish sympathy for Icarus.

He wants to establish that Icarus did not know what he was doing.

He wants to establish the idea that Icarus was a young boy.

Tags

CCSS.RL.6.4

CCSS.RL.7.10

CCSS.RL.7.4

CCSS.RL.7.5

CCSS.RL.8.10

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

How does the poet use language to set the tone of the poem?

He uses exciting language to set a fiery tone.

He uses formal language to set an uncaring tone.

He uses reasoning language to set a thoughtful tone.

He uses mournful language to set a sad tone.

Tags

CCSS.RL.4.4

CCSS.RL.5.4

CCSS.RL.6.4

CCSS.RL.7.4

CCSS.RL.8.4

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which word best describes the theme of this poem?

Fear

Wisdom

Insight

Freedom

Tags

CCSS.RL.5.9

CCSS.RL.6.2

CCSS.RL.7.2

CCSS.RL.8.2

CCSS.RL.9-10.2

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

The poet's use of the words liberty and freedom create what mood in the poem?

Cautious

Careless

Serious

Frightening

Tags

CCSS.RL.7.10

CCSS.RL.7.4

CCSS.RL.7.5

CCSS.RL.8.10

CCSS.RL.8.5

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which statement supports the kdy idea that the knowledge Icarus gained was valuable to him?

He burned his wings and fell to Earth.

He found the limits of his freedom.

He was not seen by shepherds and farmers.

He discovered a law to protect his fall.

Tags

CCSS.RI.6.2

CCSS.RI.7.2

CCSS.RL.6.2

CCSS.RL.7.2

CCSS.RL.8.2

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