General Information
Subject Area: X-Reading/Language Arts (former standards - 2008)
Grade: 6
Strand: Literary Analysis
Standard: Fiction - The student identifies, analyzes, and applies knowledge of the elements of a variety of fiction and literary texts to develop a thoughtful response to a literary selection.
Date Adopted or Revised: 01/07
Status: State Board Approved - Archived
Assessed: Yes
Test Item Specifications
- examples of descriptive language or figurative language drawn from the text but unrelated to the test item;
- inaccurate interpretations of descriptive language or figurative language; and
- plausible but incorrect distractors based on the text.
Item Type(s):
This benchmark may be assessed using:
MC
item(s)
N/A
Clarification :
The student will identify, analyze, interpret, and evaluate the author’s use of descriptive and/or figurative language and will determine how the author’s use of language impacts meaning in a variety of grade-level appropriate texts.
The student will identify, analyze, interpret, and evaluate the author’s use of descriptive and/or figurative language and will determine how the author’s use of language impacts meaning in a variety of grade-level appropriate texts.
Content Limits :
Grade-level appropriate texts should contain clear examples of descriptive language (e.g., tone, irony, mood, imagery, alliteration, onomatopoeia) and figurative language (e.g., symbolism, metaphor, simile, personification, hyperbole).
Grade-level appropriate texts should contain clear examples of descriptive language (e.g., tone, irony, mood, imagery, alliteration, onomatopoeia) and figurative language (e.g., symbolism, metaphor, simile, personification, hyperbole).
Idioms and allusions should not be assessed.
Content Focus :
Descriptive Language (e.g., tone, mood, irony, imagery, alliteration, onomatopoeia)
Figurative Language (e.g., hyperbole, symbolism, simile, metaphor, personification)
Descriptive Language (e.g., tone, mood, irony, imagery, alliteration, onomatopoeia)
Figurative Language (e.g., hyperbole, symbolism, simile, metaphor, personification)
Text Attributes :
Texts should be literary and may include, but are not limited to, fiction, nonfiction (e.g., biographies, autobiographies, personal and historical essays, diary entries, speeches, editorials, memoirs), poetry, and drama.
Other stimuli may include, but are not limited to, illustrations with captions, graphics, and charts.
Texts should be literary and may include, but are not limited to, fiction, nonfiction (e.g., biographies, autobiographies, personal and historical essays, diary entries, speeches, editorials, memoirs), poetry, and drama.
Other stimuli may include, but are not limited to, illustrations with captions, graphics, and charts.
Distractor Attributes :
Distractors may include, but are not limited to
Distractors may include, but are not limited to
Note: Distractors may also include all descriptive language examples or all figurative language examples.
Note: When assessing author’s tone (e.g., melancholic, nostalgic, forlorn) and mood (e.g., sorrowful, gloomy, optimistic) in a text, distractors should not be a list of words but should include specific examples related to the text.
Sample Test Items (1)
Test Item # | Question | Difficulty | Type |
Sample Item 1 | The sample item below is based on “New Kid” on page H–4. Read the sentence from the passage.
Which type of literary device is used in the italicized words of the sentence above? |
N/A | MC: Multiple Choice |