Everybody Jump

Quiz
•
English
•
5th - 6th Grade
•
Medium
+24
Standards-aligned

Alisa Jackson
Used 157+ times
FREE Resource
15 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
In this essay, the Earth’s population ends up in the state of Rhode Island mainly because of .....................
a. alien technology
b. magic
c. ong patterns of migration
d. a natural disaster
Tags
CCSS.RL.11-12.6
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
“Everybody Jump” is written in the_______ tense, from a__________ point of view.
a. past; first-person
b. past; third-person
c. present; first-person
d. present; third-person
Tags
CCSS.L.3.3A
CCSS.L.4.3A
CCSS.L.5.3A
CCSS.L.6.3A
CCSS.L.6.3B
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
The following passage (paragraph 9) adds to the development of the entire article mainly by__________ .
Technically, this delivers a lot of energy into the Earth, but it’s spread out over a large enough area that it doesn’t do much more than leave footprints in a lot of gardens. A slight pulse of pressure spreads through the North American continental crust and dissipates with little effect. The sound of all those feet hitting the ground creates a loud, drawn-out roar which lasts many seconds.
A. explaining why all the people landing at the same time has little effect
B. suggesting that the people are all jumping in gardens
C. describing the sights and sounds that accompany such a massive, coordinated jump
D. suggesting that the jump would have had a greater effect if the people had gathered more closely together
Tags
CCSS.RI.4.10
CCSS.RI.5.10
CCSS.RI.6.4
CCSS.RI.7.4
CCSS.RI.8.4
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Cell phones don’t work in the following passage (paragraph 13) mainly because .
A cell phone comes out of a pocket. Within seconds, the rest of the world’s five billion phones follow. All of them—even those compatible with the region’s towers—are displaying some version of “NO SIGNAL”. The cell networks have all collapsed under the unprecedented load.
A. international phones don’t work with the region’s cell towers
B. the networks can’t support the number of people trying to get a signal
C. service has been interrupted by the force of the coordinated jump
D. the region’s cell towers are outdated and in need of repair
Tags
CCSS.RI.4.10
CCSS.RI.5.10
CCSS.RI.6.4
CCSS.RI.7.4
CCSS.RI.8.4
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Based on the following passage (paragraphs 17-18), what is most likely one of the author’s opinions?
Some make it past New York or Boston before running out of fuel. Since the electricity is probably not on at this point, rather than find a working gas pump, it’s easier to just abandon the car and steal the new one. Who can stop you? All the cops are in Rhode Island.
The edge of the crowd spreads outward into southern Massachusetts and Connecticut. Any two people who meet are unlikely to have a language in common, and almost nobody knows the area. The state becomes a patchwork chaos of coalescing and collapsing social hierarchies. Violence is common. Everybody is hungry and thirsty. Grocery stores are emptied. Fresh water is hard to come by and there’s no efficient system for distributing it.
A. It is easy to steal a car if one is desperate enough.
B. Putting the entire world’s population in such a small area would create deadly chaos.
C. A tank of gas will likely get you from Rhode Island to New York or Boston.
D. Knowledge is the key to getting out of any bad situation.
Tags
CCSS.RL.11-12.6
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Which sentence from the text most strongly supports the correct answer to Question 5?
A. “Who can stop you? All the cops are in Rhode Island.”
B. The state becomes a patchwork chaos of coalescing and collapsing social hierarchies.”
C. “The edge of the crowd spreads outward into southern Massachusetts and Connecticut.”
D. Violence is common.”
Tags
CCSS.RI.3.10
CCSS.RI.4.10
CCSS.RI.5.10
CCSS.RI.6.4
CCSS.RI.7.4
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Which conclusion about human beings is most strongly supported by the passage below (paragraphs 19-21)?
Within weeks, Rhode Island is a graveyard of billions.
The survivors spread out across the face of the world and struggle to build a new civilization atop the pristine ruins of the old. Our species staggers on, but our population has been greatly reduced. Earth’s orbit is completely unaffected—it spins along exactly as it did before our species-wide jump.
But at least now we know.
A. Rhode Island is the smallest U.S. state in land area, but it is still large enough to contain billions of graves.
B. Organizers of any future “species-wide jump” should consider potential outcomes of such an event.
C. Human beings cannot strongly affect the Earth’s orbit, but they can affect one another a great deal.
D. It would be important to learn the outcome of this experiment, no matter the cost.
Tags
CCSS.RL.11-12.6
Create a free account and access millions of resources
Similar Resources on Wayground
14 questions
Index and Glossary Usage

Quiz
•
5th - 6th Grade
15 questions
Riding Freedom Ch. 5

Quiz
•
5th Grade
14 questions
The 13 Colonies

Quiz
•
5th Grade
13 questions
USA and its main cities

Quiz
•
6th - 12th Grade
20 questions
The USA

Quiz
•
5th Grade
14 questions
Red Crab/Monarch Magic

Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Riding Freedom

Quiz
•
5th Grade
13 questions
United States geography

Quiz
•
KG - University
Popular Resources on Wayground
50 questions
Trivia 7/25

Quiz
•
12th Grade
11 questions
Standard Response Protocol

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
11 questions
Negative Exponents

Quiz
•
7th - 8th Grade
12 questions
Exponent Expressions

Quiz
•
6th Grade
4 questions
Exit Ticket 7/29

Quiz
•
8th Grade
20 questions
Subject-Verb Agreement

Quiz
•
9th Grade
20 questions
One Step Equations All Operations

Quiz
•
6th - 7th Grade
18 questions
"A Quilt of a Country"

Quiz
•
9th Grade
Discover more resources for English
11 questions
Standard Response Protocol

Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
12 questions
Exponent Expressions

Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
One Step Equations All Operations

Quiz
•
6th - 7th Grade
13 questions
Primary and Secondary Sources

Quiz
•
6th Grade
15 questions
Decimal Operations

Quiz
•
6th Grade
10 questions
Common Denominators

Quiz
•
5th Grade