Foundations of Reading 090 Subarea 3: 81-91Ob.8;58,59,92-100Ob.9

Foundations of Reading 090 Subarea 3: 81-91Ob.8;58,59,92-100Ob.9

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22 Qs

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Foundations of Reading 090 Subarea 3: 81-91Ob.8;58,59,92-100Ob.9

Foundations of Reading 090 Subarea 3: 81-91Ob.8;58,59,92-100Ob.9

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22 questions

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1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

58. The theoretical basis for including the brainstorming activity in this lesson is that having the students share their vocabulary knowledge about farms prior to the reading will: Before reading aloud a book about a farm to a group of beginning readers, a first-grade teacher has the students brainstorm and briefly discuss words related to farms. Next, the teacher reads the text aloud from a big book, pointing to each word being read.

Periodically, the teacher stops to discuss with students key concepts or events described in the text and to guide students in relating the text to the illustrations. After finishing the read-aloud, the teacher puts the book in the classroom library and encourages the students to read it on their own.

A. give the teacher an opportunity to assess and compare the students' oral language skills.

B. reinforce the students' understanding and recognition of key concepts about print.

C. facilitate the students' comprehension by activating prior knowledge and building schema.                

D. prepare the students to benefit from explicit phonics instruction related to the text.

Answer explanation

Correct Response: C. The brainstorming activity described in the stimulus paragraph (on page A-57) is designed to activate students' prior knowledge and build background knowledge (schema) to facilitate their reading comprehensionof the story. A is incorrect because the activity would not be very effective in assessing and comparing students' oral language skills, since their vocabularies are likely to vary widely on this topic (farms) depending on their priorexperiences with farms. The activity also does not relate to the development of concepts of print (B) or phonics (D).

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

59. The most important reason for putting the book in the classroom library is to promote the students':

Before reading aloud a book about a farm to a group of beginning readers, a first-grade teacher has the students brainstorm and briefly discuss words related to farms. Next, the teacher reads the text aloud from a big book, pointing to each word being read.

Periodically, the teacher stops to discuss with students key concepts or events described in the text and toguide students in relating the text to the illustrations. After finishing the read-aloud, the teacher puts the book in the classroom library and encourages the students to read it on their own.

A. love of reading by facilitating their access to a story that they have already heard, understood, and enjoyed.

  B. understanding of the alphabetic principle by reinforcing their knowledge of letter-sound correspondences.

C. oral language development by providing them with the opportunity to imitate the teacher's reading of a text.

A. use of metacognitive strategies by allowing them to practice self- monitoring when reading silently.

Answer explanation

Correct Response: A. Reading aloud to children is a research-based strategy for promoting students' interest in reading and in books. Providing students with access to a book that the teacher has already read aloud and discussed with them is likely to foster their love of reading because the teacher has provided various scaffolds for comprehending the story, andthus they are likely to experience some level of success in reading it independently. Responses B, C, and D are incorrectbecause simply providing access to the book is not likely to contribute to the students' knowledge of the alphabetic principle (B), oral language development (C), or use of metacognitive strategies (D), which all require explicit instruction and guided practice.

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

Media Image

81. A third-grade teacher has been conducting a series of ongoing assessments of a student's oral reading. Shown below is a sentence from a text, followed by a transcription of a typical example of the student's oral reading performance. After reading the sentence, the student paused and then reread it without the teacher's prompting and self-corrected the errors. Based on this information, the teacher could best meet this student's

needs by adjusting instruction in order to:

A. enhance the student's oral vocabulary development.

B. develop the student's ability to self- monitor comprehension.

C. improve the student's decoding skills.

D. promote the student's ability to track print.

Answer explanation

Correct Response: C. The student's oral reading performance in this sample strongly suggests a lack of foundational knowledge in phonics and sight words. The miscues indicate serious decoding difficulties with various phonics elements, including lack of automaticity in decoding common vowel digraphs (reading boats for boots), common consonant digraphs (reading ck for ch), and complex consonant clusters (reading crucked for crunched). The student also misread a high-frequency sight word (through) that should have been mastered by the end of second grade. Conversely, this oral reading sample provides no evidence that the studenthas difficulty tracking print (D). And, by self-correcting his or her errors without prompting, the student demonstrates both understanding of the text's vocabulary (A) and the ability to self-monitor for comprehension (B).

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

82. Which of the following types of assessments would best provide information about the comparative reading proficiency of students in an elementary school?

 

A. a test of vocabulary development

  B. a norm-referenced survey test

C. a reading miscue inventory

  D. a diagnostic portfolio

Answer explanation

Correct Response: B. Norm-referenced tests are designed specifically for the purpose of comparing students' performance.Norms are statistics that describe the test performance of a representative sample group. In general, the tests in A and C are designed to measure the degree to which students meet specific objectives (i.e., they are criterion referenced); therefore, A and Care incorrect. A diagnostic portfolio (D) is individually administered and would most likely contain a comprehensive battery of reading assessments designed for diagnostic purposes.

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

83. Considerations of validity in test construction relate most closely to:

 

 A. how a particular examinee's test performance relates to a preestablished standard.

B. whether the test questions effectively measure their specified content.

C. how a particular examinee's test performance compares to the performance of other examinees.

D. whether the test results are likely to be repeatable with a similar examinee test group.

Answer explanation

Correct Response: B. Validity is the degree to which a test measures what it is intended to measure. A is incorrectbecause criterion referencing is the term used when a student's performance is related to a preestablished standard or set of objectives. C describes norm referencing. D describes test reliability.

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

84. If a standardized test is said to lack reliability, the test:

 

A. is not measuring what it is supposed to measure.

B. has not proven to be useful as an instructional intervention.

C. gives fluctuating scores in different administrations.

D. has poor predictive value relative to students' classroom performance.

Answer explanation

Correct Response: C. Reliability indicates the degree to which a test yields consistent results over successive administrations. If a test yielded fluctuating results, it would be considered to have low reliability. A relates to a test'scontent validity, while D relates to a test's predictive validity. Standardized tests are not intended to be used as interventions (B).

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 5 pts

85. Which of the following informal assessment results provides the clearest indication that a kindergarten child has attained a beginning level of phonemic awareness?

 

 A. The student can clap the "beats" or syllables of familiar multisyllable words.

B. The student can delete the second "word" or syllable in compound words.

  C. The student can identify the beginning sound of single-syllable words.

D. The student can substitute phonemes in the medial position of single-syllable words.

Answer explanation

Correct Response: C. Phonemic awareness is a specific type of phonological awareness involving the ability to distinguish the separate phonemes in a spoken word. Identifying the beginning sound of a single-syllable word is typically one of the earliest phonemic awareness skills developed, while substituting medial phonemes (D) is considered a more advanced phonemic awareness skill. A and B describe skills at the syllable or word level and are therefore not considered phonemic awareness skills.

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