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Student Name READING Reading Sample Test Book GRADE 999-850-1-7

FCAT Sample Test Materials These sample test materials are designed to help you prepare to answer FCAT questions. These materials introduce you to the kinds of questions you will answer when you take the FCAT and include hints for responding to the different kinds of FCAT questions. The FCAT Reading sample test materials for Grade are composed of the books described below: Sample Test Book Includes sample reading passages, a sample test, and instructions for completing the sample test. (Copies are available for all students in the tested grade.) Sample Answer Key Includes answers and explanations for the questions in the sample test. (Copies are available for classroom teachers only.) = This book Every effort has been made to trace the ownership of all copyrighted material and to secure the necessary permissions to reprint selections. In the event of any question arising as to the use of any material, the publisher expresses regrets for any inadvertent error and will make the necessary correction(s) in future printings. Copyright Statement for This Assessment and School Performance Publication Authorization for reproduction of this document is hereby granted to persons acting in an official capacity within the Uniform System of Public K 12 Schools as defined in Section 1000.01(), Florida Statutes. The copyright notice at the bottom of this page must be included in all copies. All trademarks and trade names found in this publication are the property of their respective owners and are not associated with the publishers of this publication. Permission is NOT granted for distribution or reproduction outside of the Uniform System of Public K 12 Schools or for commercial distribution of the copyrighted materials without written authorization from the Florida Department of Education. Questions regarding use of these copyrighted materials should be sent to the following: The Administrator Assessment and School Performance Florida Department of Education Tallahassee, Florida 32399-000 Copyright 2006 State of Florida Department of State

Taking the FCAT Reading Sample Test Hints for Taking the FCAT Reading Test Here are some hints to help you do your best when you take the FCAT Reading test. Keep these hints in mind when you answer the sample questions. Learn how to answer each kind of question. The FCAT Reading test for Grade has three types of questions: multiple-choice, short-response, and extended-response. Read the directions carefully. Ask your teacher to explain any directions you do not understand. Read the passages and questions very carefully. You may look back at a passage as often as you like. Answer the questions you are sure about first. If a question seems too difficult, skip it and go back to it later. Be sure to fill in the answer bubbles correctly. Do not make any stray marks around answer spaces. Think positively. Some questions may seem hard, but others will be easy. Check each answer to make sure it is the best answer for the question. Relax. Some people get nervous about tests. It s natural. Just do your best. Page 1

How to Answer the Read, Think, Explain Questions Answers to the short- and extended-response questions can receive full or partial credit. You should try to answer these questions even if you are not sure of the correct answer. If a portion of the answer is correct, you will get a portion of the points. Allow about 5 minutes to answer the short Read, Think, Explain questions and about 10 to 15 minutes to answer the long questions. Read the question carefully. If you do not understand the question, go back and review the passage. Think carefully and organize your thoughts before starting to write the answer. Write your answer on the lines provided in the Sample Answer Book. Remember to include details and information from the passage in your answer. Use clear, concise language to explain your answer. Be sure to answer every part of the question. Reread the answer to make sure it says what you want it to say. Directions for Taking the Reading Sample Test Some of the questions in this sample test are called multiple-choice questions. A multiplechoice question is followed by several answer choices. Read all the answer choices under each question and decide which answer is correct. For this sample test, you will fill in the bubble next to the answer choice you think is correct for each multiple-choice question. The Sample Test contains two reading passages and 16 sample questions. It should take about 30 to 5 minutes to read the passages and answer all the questions. You will mark your answers in this book. If you don t understand a question, just ask your teacher to explain it to you. Your teacher has the answers to the sample test questions. Page 2

FCAT Reading Sample Test SAMPLE Here is a list with pictures to help you locate the passages in your Reading Sample Test. The questions follow each passage. The Red Fox........................................ Page Living on the Edge of Danger......................... Page 10 After you have read each passage, read and answer the questions. READ THINK EXPLAIN This symbol appears next to questions that require short written answers. Use about 5 minutes to answer each of these questions. A complete and correct answer to each of these questions is worth 2 points. A partially correct answer is worth 1 point. READ THINK EXPLAIN This symbol appears next to questions that require longer written answers. Use about 10 to 15 minutes to answer these questions. A complete and correct answer to each of these questions is worth points. A partially correct answer is worth 1, 2, or 3 points. Page 3

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book Read the story The Red Fox before answering Numbers 1 through 8. The Red Fox by Donna Stringfellow IT WAS COLD in the forest. A bitter March wind rattled bare trees like skeletons and whipped up the dark clouds in an iron gray sky. The approaching snow storm probably would not be the last one of the winter. The red fox couldn t have chosen a worse time to bring a litter of kits 1 into the world. Nestled in a small hollow beneath a hickory tree, curled against their mother s plush fur, the three young kits were warm and comfortable. But when the freezing storms came, the shallow nest would surely let in the snow. And it would be too easy for predators to find the babies when their mother left them to search for food. The fox knew she would have to seek a new home, and soon. She nuzzled her kits, whose eyes were not yet open. She licked them, and they mewed about her like kittens. Then she left them. Outside her den, cold air stung her nose as she sniffed about for danger. Then she padded off into the gray, wintry forest. She ducked beneath a wooden fence and followed a path across a familiar field, where during the summer she d chased rabbits. She was near a farm, a place she d always avoided because of the fearful smell of humans. But now, the warmth and protection of the barn drew her close. Squeezing through the gap where a board was missing, she sneaked into the barn. The straw was deep and soft, a perfect bed for fox kits. Page 1 kits: young animals, such as kittens or baby foxes Go On

FCAT Reading Sample Test Book SAMPLE The red fox hurried back to her babies. One by one she carried them under the fence, across the field, and through the hole in the barn wall. And when all three kits were snuggled down in the blanket of straw, she licked them and felt safe. Even when the farmer came to milk his cows, the silent fox knew her family would be unnoticed, hidden in the farthest and darkest corner of the barn. One snowy evening, the farmer turned off his lantern and hung it on the wall as he left the barn, just as he did every night. But as he closed the door, the lantern slipped from its hook and shattered on the floor. A tiny spark danced across the pool of kerosene 2 and nibbled at the scattered straw. The fox watched with wide, yellow eyes as the straw curled and caught flame. Wisps of smoke reached her nostrils, and she became fearful. Slipping through the hole in the wall, she ran outside and howled. Her voice carried across the barnyard, and the farmer turned around. He was surprised and angry to see a fox. He was even more angry to see it run into his barn. Setting down his milk pail, the farmer headed back to his barn, determined to chase away the unwelcome visitor. But when he threw open the barn door, fire danced about his feet. Grabbing a shovel, he beat the flames until they were out. Once again, the barn was safe and dark. 2 kerosene: a thin oil used for fuel Page 5 Go On

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book Taking up a flashlight, the farmer shone its beam about the barn. It finally came to rest on the fox, her family nestled close, her eyes shining gold. The farmer smiled. He flicked off the light and walked away, quietly closing the barn door behind him. Winter s harshness gave way to spring s gentle warmth. One day the farmer glanced into the darkest corner of the barn and found it empty. But for a time it had been a place to feel safe. It had been home to a red fox family.. The Red Fox reprinted by permission of SPIDER magazine, March 1995, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1995 by Donna Stringfellow, art copyright 1995 by Sylvia Long-Spain and reprinted by permission. Page 6 Go On

FCAT Reading Sample Test Book SAMPLE Now answer Numbers 1 through 8. Base your answers on the story The Red Fox. 0LAA123M0085 1 Which words from the story have almost the same meaning? A B carried, hurried curled, snuggled C D found, followed sniffed, nibbled 0LAA221M010 2 What did the farmer do RIGHT AFTER he put out the fire? F He chased the kits away. G H I He opened up the barn door. He looked around for the fox. He hung the lantern on the wall. 0LAA227M0121 3 Why are the fox kits compared to kittens in the story? A They live in a shallow nest. B C D They are afraid of humans. They sleep in a soft blanket of straw at night. They make a soft sound when they are licked. Page 7 Go On

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book READ THINK EXPLAIN 0LAE122S0055 In the story, both the fox and the farmer help each other. Use details and information from the story to explain how they help each other. 5 0LAE221M011 It was hard to see the kits in the barn because F they stayed in a dark corner. G H I the farmer s lantern was out. they hid behind the mother fox. the farmer s flashlight was broken. Page 8 Go On

FCAT Reading Sample Test Book SAMPLE 6 READ THINK EXPLAIN 0LAE123S0051 In the story, the fox had two homes. Tell how the two homes were DIFFERENT. Use details and information from the story to support your answer. 0LAE221M0177 7 Why did the mother fox usually stay away from the farm? A She was afraid of people. B C D She did not like the cows. She was afraid to go under the fence. She did not like the smell of kerosene. 0LAE221M0178 8 Why did the farmer smile when he saw the fox and her kits in his barn? F The farmer thought the kits looked funny. G H I The farmer was glad to have the kits as pets. The farmer understood why the fox had howled. The farmer knew the fox would protect his cows. Page 9 Go On

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book Read the story Living on the Edge of Danger before answering Numbers 9 through 16. LIVING ON THE EDGE OF DANGER By Jack Myers Senior Science Editor The silver ant survives in heat that would kill other ants. A nts probably aren t your favorite insects. But you can t help being interested in the story of one spunky kind of ant. It has some special tricks for living in the hot, dry sands of the Sahara, in Africa. This desert is one of the most difficult places on Earth for animals to live. Most desert animals have learned how to beat the heat by burrowing and living underground during the hottest part of the day. They come out to hunt for food at night and in the This Saharan silver ant has climbed onto the stalk of a plant to cool off. early morning. Of course those animals include the predators, which come out at the same time to hunt. So ants and other small insects searching for their food are in danger of becoming food for larger animals, especially the desert lizards. Head for Home As the morning sun rises, the sands heat up rapidly, and almost every creature scurries back to its burrow. 1 Those that are still hungry and keep looking for food risk the danger of dying of heat shock before they get home. Most desert ants and other insects head for home when the temperature gets up to about 95 degrees Fahrenheit. They must sneak past the ant lizards and win the race against rising temperature to get home safely. By the time the temperature gets to about 113 degrees, most ants are safe in their underground nests except for one special kind, the Saharan silver ant. The silver ant stays out in higher temperatures than any other desert ant does. In fact, it feeds on insects that died in the heat. How does it survive? And why does it do it? Page 10 1 burrow: underground home Go On

FCAT Reading Sample Test Book SAMPLE Cool Tricks One trick of the silver ant is that it can withstand higher temperatures no one knows how even up to 128 degrees. And it knows how to find places where it can rest and cool off. Down on the surface of the sand, where the ant lives, is the hottest place around. Just a few inches up above the sand the air is a lot cooler. So the silver ant spends a part of its hunting time climbing up on plants, like the The ant lizard would eat more silver ants than it does if the ants would come out of their nests when the desert is cooler. one in the photograph on the previous page. Silver ants have another outside their nest, often only trick that is even more about ten minutes. surprising. Their whole colony Naturally you have to stays in the nest until the wonder why the silver ants sand temperature outside gets don t come out of their nest to about 116 degrees. Then until the temperature gets so a few scouts give a signal, high. Scientists who studied and hundreds of ants come them wondered, too. They pouring out. This usually found an answer in the happens about noontime, when behavior of the ant lizard. It the temperature is rising rapidly. is especially fond of silver Silver ants have a busy time ants and often has its burrow of it, hunting and climbing up close to one of their nests. But on grass stalks to cool off. Then the ant lizard has to worry they must hurry home again about getting overheated, too. before the temperature gets to By the time the temperature 128 degrees. That gives them gets to 116 degrees, all the ant just a short hunting time lizards are back in their burrows. Magic Temperature You can see why 116 degrees becomes a magic temperature for silver ants. When the desert sand gets that warm, one of their enemies, the ant lizard, is asleep in its burrow. Then the ants can safely go out hunting. Of course their safety doesn t last long. Their other enemy, the rising temperature, will tell them they must start for home before the sand gets to a killing temperature. Lots of animals have special times of day or night when they do their hunting and searching for food. But there can t be very many that have as short a hunting time as the Saharan silver ant. Many animals live very close to danger, especially those that live in the icy cold of the Arctic or in the hot, dry sands of the desert. Even so, the silver ant may hold some kind of record for living on the edge of danger. When the desert heats up, silver ants often get only about ten Second, the ant lizard stops hunting minutes to hunt for food. and goes into its burrow at about 116 degrees. First, most ants head for home between the temperatures of 95 and 113 degrees Fahrenheit. Finally, the silver ant has a few minutes to come out and hunt after the ant lizard goes home and before the temperature gets too high. Living on the Edge of Danger by Jack Myers, November 1995, copyright 1995 by Highlights for Children, Inc., Columbus, Ohio. Page 11 Go On

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book Now answer Numbers 9 through 16. Base your answers on the story Living on the Edge of Danger. 0LAA123M0007 9 Read these sentences. Most desert animals...come out to hunt for food at night and in the early morning. Of course those animals include the predators, which come out at the same time to hunt. What does the word predators mean? A B C D animals that eat plants animals that dig burrows animals that hide from insects animals that feed on other animals 0LAA221M0009 10 The article says that silver ants are living on the edge of danger because they F G H I live near the desert s border. live in an underground burrow. have only a short time to cool off. have only a short time to find food. 0LAE123M0005 11 How are silver ants different from other desert ants? A They hunt in hotter weather. B C D They can die in the desert heat. They are hunted by ant lizards. They nest in underground burrows. Page 12 Go On

FCAT Reading Sample Test Book SAMPLE READ THINK EXPLAIN 0LAA228S0005 12 What do the ant lizards and silver ants of the Sahara Desert do when the sand temperature reaches 116 degrees? Be sure to include details and information from the article. 0LAE221M0009 13 Why is the night a dangerous time for the silver ant to hunt? F It is too dark to see enemies. G H I It is too cold to move around. There are too many other ants hunting for food. There are too many ant lizards hunting for food. 0LAA227M0006 1 Which of these is an enemy of BOTH the silver ant and the ant lizard? A other ants B C D the desert s heat research scientists the night s darkness Page 13 Go On

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book 15 READ THINK EXPLAIN 0LAA221E0011 Silver ants have a special way to hunt. Use information and details from the article to explain: each step of the silver ants hunt, and the reasons why silver ants hunt the way they do Page 1 Go On

FCAT Reading Sample Test Book SAMPLE 0LAA222M0007 16 Why did the author write Living on the Edge of Danger? F to alert people that deserts are dangerous places G H I to compare the many ways African animals hunt to convince students that ants are smart creatures to describe the different habits of a Saharan insect Page 15

SAMPLE FCAT Reading Sample Test Book STOP This is the end of the Reading Sample Test. Until time is called, go back and check your work or answer questions you did not complete. When you have finished, close your Sample Test Book. Page 16

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READING 1 2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 A B C D E Assessment and School Performance Florida Department of Education Tallahassee, Florida Copyright 2006 State of Florida Department of State