Thursday, December 20, 2007

GRADE 5 english books

GRADE 5
ENGLISH:

Reading/Literature and Research
CORE 1
Property of the Virginia Department of Education
 2004 by the Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education, James Monroe Building, 101 N. 14th Street,
Richmond, Virginia, 23219. All rights reserved. Except as permitted by law, this material may not be reproduced or
used in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any
information storage or retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner. Commonwealth of
Virginia public school educators may photocopy or print any portion of these Released Tests for educational purposes
without requesting permission. All others should direct their requests to the Commonwealth of Virginia Department
of Education at (804) 225-2102, Division of Assessment and Reporting.
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DIRECTIONS
Read each passage. Then read each question about the passage. Decide which is the best answer to each
question. Mark the space in your answer booklet for the answer you have chosen.
SAMPLE
A Book
1 A book is like a television
2 Inside your head.
3 It tells you stories.
4 It takes you places.
5 It scares you.
6 It makes you laugh.
7 But—
8 You draw the pictures.
9 You write the songs.
10 You pick the colors.
11 You choose the programs.
12 A book is like a television
13 Inside your head—
14 And no one ever tells you
15 To turn it off.
A This passage would most likely be found
in a —
A science textbook
B book of poetry 
C history magazine
D book of short stories
B Inthis passage, a book is compared
to a —
F story
G picture
H song
J television 
2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 2
English: Reading/Literature and Research
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Directions: Read the story and answer the questions that follow.
Mary Walton and the Noisy Trains
1 Clang, clang, clang! Groaning, MaryWalton buried her head under her pillow. It was no use
trying to sleep. The sound of New York City’s Elevated Railway, or “El,” shook the entire
apartment.
2 At breakfast Mary watched the milk in her glass quiver. She said to her father, “Papa, I know the
El trains are essential. Almost everyone in the city rides them to work. But why do they have to be
so noisy?” “I don’t know, Mary,” her father replied. “There’s a challenge for you. Maybe you can
find a way to make the trains run quietly.”
3 Mary’s father believed that girls had a right to an education just as boys did. He made sure Mary
finished high school even though, in the 1880s, girls often left school at age sixteen to go to work.
Knowing she had a good mind that was meant to be used, Mary began to consider the problem at
hand. She went to the railway office to see what she could learn. “Has anyone found a way to solve
the problem of the noisy El trains yet?” she asked the railway man.
4 “Miss, if you could tell me how to make the El trains quieter, I’d shake your hand,” he answered.
He leaned forward. “Let me tell you something. The railway will pay good money to the person
who comes up with the answer. I hear some of the top inventors in the country, even Thomas
Edison himself, are trying to find a solution.”
5 Mary sighed. If the great Thomas Edison hadn’t been able to find an answer, how could she? Still,
Mary knew this invention was important; its benefits would be great. People worked hard. They
needed a way to get to work, but they also needed calm, quiet, and good sleep! She began to ride
the El trains during every spare minute. She walked underneath the high tracks, looking up to
see how they were made.Watching and listening, Mary considered the problem.
6 She still hadn’t found a solution when spring turned to summer, the worst time of year for train
noise. Opening the windows helped to cool the hot apartment, but the noise of the train was
unbearably loud with the windows open.
7 One night Mary made a little tunnel of pillows and put her head in the middle. “Maybe this will
muffle the sound,” she thought. Suddenly she sat up, eyes sparkling, and said, “That’s it! I need a
way to muffle the sound!” What material could do that? Rocks were too hard to absorb sound.
Wood wasn’t sturdy enough. Mary snapped her fingers. “What about sand? If we put the rails in
sand and find a way to keep the sand together, it might work.”
8 Mary spent many nights at the library. Finally she came up with a system to bed the rails in sand
that was contained in asphalt. Mary wrote up her plans and sent them to the Patent Office in
Washington, D.C. She also sent the railway company a letter describing her invention and how it
worked.
9 Weeks passed, and Mary began to think nothing would happen. One day two men appeared at the
door. “The president of our railway company wants to thank you for your invention,” they said.
“Here’s a check for ten thousand dollars.” Mary could hardly believe it. That was a lot of money!
There would be more to come, too, as other railway stations with elevated railways used her
invention.
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10 One day, Mary went back to the railway office. “It looks like the problem got solved,” she said.
11 The railway man nodded. “By a young woman. Made her rich, I hear.”
12 “Yet there’s still one payment she hasn’t collected,” Mary said, holding out her hand. “You
promised to shake my hand!”
1 In paragraph 2, the word essential
means —
A dangerous
B automatic
C necessary 
D peculiar
2 Why did Mary Walton choose sand as
the best material for her invention?
F It stays together by itself and can be
wrapped around rails.
G It can be found in large amounts on
New York’s beaches.
H It is harder than rock and softer than
wood.
J It absorbs sound and can be contained
in something sturdy. 
3 Why did Mary go to the railway office
a second time?
A She wanted to learn more about how
her own invention would be used in the
city’s elevated trains.
B She thought the man would give her a
job working for the railway after she
had helped so much.
C She wondered if there was anything else
she could do to help improve the
citizens’ quality of life.
D She wanted to have the railway man
shake her hand for solving the problem,
as he had said he would. 
4 If the author had used headings, the
best place to add the heading “Mary’s
Efforts Are Rewarded” would be just
above paragraph —
F 8
G 9 
H 10
J 11
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2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 4
5 This story shows how Mary Walton —
A decides to become wealthy and finds a
way to earn money
B lives a good life in spite of living in a
painful situation
C finds a way to move to a quieter,
healthier place
D takes on a difficult challenge and
successfully meets it 
6 Based on events described in this
story, Mary’s father can best be
described as —
F mysterious
G impatient
H encouraging 
J protective
7 Why is Mary’s bed an important setting
in this story?
A She is very tired from trying to solve the
problem and needs a lot of sleep.
B Using pillows to hide the sounds of the
train helps her to come up with her
invention. 
C Living in a small apartment, she does
most of her thinking while lying on her
bed.
D Train noises are heard most from her
bed because her bedroom is closest to
the tracks.
Here is a table showing some other
inventions of the 1800s. Use it to
answer the next two questions.
8 The entries on the table are listed in
order according to —
F year of invention 
G importance of invention
H alphabetical order, last name of inventor
J alphabetical order, name of invention
9 Which two inventions came about in
1876?
A Telephone and sewing machine
B Microphone and telegraph
C Telephone and microphone 
D Light bulb and telegraph
YEAR INVENTOR INVENTION
Samuel F. B. Morse
Isaac M. Singer
Alexander Graham Bell
1844
1853
1876
1876
1879
Emile Berliner
Thomas Edison
Telegraph
Sewing Machine
Telephone
Microphone
Light Bulb
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2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 5
Directions: Read the poems and answer the questions that follow.
Wintermelt
1 The sun is warming. MMMM.
2 The river’s melting. CRACK!
3 Frogs are waking. CROAK!
4 The beaver’s swimming. SMACK!
5 Fish are jumping. SPLASH!
6 Birds sing CHICKADEE!
7 Buds are bursting. POP!
8 Days are longer. WHEE!
9 Kites are flying. WHOOSH!
10 Ice is breaking. CRUNCH!
11 Flies are hatching. BZZZZ!
12 Let’s have a picnic lunch.
13 Geese are returning. HONK!
14 Baseball players SWING!
15 Ice cream stands are open.
16 Kids are screaming. SPRING!
Canoe
1 April is almost through.
2 Let’s take the red canoe
3 and paddle all the way
4 to the thirty-first of May
5 until the river bends
6 until the story ends
7 until the day is night
8 until the time is right.
9 Maybe we’ll go so far
10 we’ll tie up to a star,
11 and ask the sun and moon
12 to paddle us into June.
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10 Which line from the poem “Wintermelt”
tells about flowers blooming?
F 5
G 6
H 7 
J 8
11 In the poem “Wintermelt,” words like
“bursting” and “breaking” make spring
seem like —
A a party
B an explosion 
C a quiet event
D a sport
12 In “Wintermelt,” lines 13–16 are most
likely to make the reader feel —
F calm
G afraid
H curious
J excited 
13 Which rhyme scheme is used in the
poem “Canoe”?
A aabb 
B abab
C abba
D abca
14 Lines 9–12 in the poem “Canoe”
describe —
F a flight of imagination 
G an invitation to the reader
H an actual event
J a plan for a summer vacation
15 If the poet who wrote “Canoe” had
wanted to find another word to use in
place of story, which of these sources
would have been most helpful?
A Thesaurus 
B Encyclopedia
C Dictionary
D Atlas
16 We can tell that these poems are not
free verse because they both have —
F punctuation marks
G titles
H rhyming words 
J capital letters
17 The poets wrote these poems mostly
to —
A explain
B persuade
C inform
D entertain 
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2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 7
Directions: Read the article and answer the questions that follow.
The Woman Behind Little Women
1 One of America’s best-known and most-loved authors is Louisa May Alcott. She wrote poems,
plays, short stories, and books. For over a hundred years, her works have been popular among
both adults and children. How did Alcott become a famous writer?
2 Born in 1832, Alcott grew up in Massachusetts with her three sisters. From an early age, she
loved to write. She would think up wonderful stories that she turned into plays. Alcott and her
sisters acted out the dramas. Alcott always played the most exciting parts: ghosts, bandits, and
evil queens. She also loved playing and wandering outdoors. In fact, she was considered quite a
“tomboy.” In those days, girls were expected to be ladylike, which meant mostly sitting around
looking pretty. This was not Alcott’s way! She once said that no boy could be her friend until she
had beaten him in a race. Girls had to climb trees and leap fences with her if they wanted to be
her friends.
3 Alcott’s family was poor. At age fifteen, Alcott decided to help out. However, it was not easy for
women to find work in the 1800s. Alcott worked at any job she could find. She took care of
children, she taught, and she washed laundry for other people.
4 Alcott’s love of writing was always an essential part of her. She believed that it was as much a
right and duty for women to do something with their lives as it was for men. So, wanting to work
and loving to write, she began her career as an author. Her first poem was published in a
magazine in 1852. She didn’t earn a lot of money for that first work. She was on her way, though,
to a career that would bring her fame—and bring the security that she had wanted for her family.
They soon would be free from worry about earning a living.
5 Alcott wrote from her own life experiences and from her imagination. During the CivilWar, Alcott
volunteered to work as a nurse. She wrote about this work in her book Hospital Sketches. She also
wrote thrillers that were full of suspense. When her publisher asked her to write a book for girls,
Alcott turned to her own life.
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6 It was then, in 1868, that she wrote what was to become her most popular book, Little Women. The
novel is set in New England during the CivilWar. It tells the story of four sisters growing up. The
family is very similar to the Alcotts. The book’s main character, Jo, is based on Alcott herself. Like
Alcott, Jo is a determined young woman with a mind of her own. The book was an instant success.
It is still popular today and has been made into a movie. Alcott also wrote children’s books with
boys as the main characters. This was the case in two other Alcott books, Little Men and
Jo’s Boys.
7 Early in her career someone once told Alcott that she should give up writing and “stick to
teaching.” It is fortunate that Alcott paid no attention to this misguided person. She knew what
she wanted to do with her life—and she did it!
18 Use this dictionary entry to answer the
next question.
works \‘wuˆ rks\ n. 1. the moving
parts of a machine. 2. results of
creative talent. 3. everything available.
4. full treatment.
Which definition is the correct meaning
for the word works as it is used in the
first paragraph?
F Definition 1
G Definition 2 
H Definition 3
J Definition 4
19 Which words in paragraph 2 help
readers know what the word dramas
means?
A grew up in Massachusetts
B loved to write
C turned into plays 
D wandering outdoors
20 Which question does paragraph 3
answer?
F How did Alcott help her family? 
G What kind of work did Alcott’s father
do?
H Where did Alcott go to school?
J Why was it difficult for women to find
work in the 1800s?
21 In paragraph 6, why are the words
Little Men and Jo’s Boys written in
italics?
A To make the words easier to read
B To show that they are titles of books 
C To make them more interesting to
readers
D To show that they are different from
other books
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22 The author most likely included the
last paragraph to —
F point out that Louisa May Alcott
obtained what she wanted out of life 
G explain why some people should not give
advice
H convince readers to read more about
Louisa May Alcott’s life
J encourage readers to write stories about
their own experiences
23 The idea that Alcott liked adventure
can be supported with all of these
EXCEPT —
A she played the exciting parts in her
plays
B she loved playing and wandering
outdoors
C she washed laundry for other people 
D she wrote thrilling stories that were full
of suspense
24 Which word best describes Alcott as an
adult?
F Determined 
G Amusing
H Delicate
J Mysterious
25 Which word in this passage has a root
word that means “to form an idea”?
A experiences
B imagination 
C wonderful
D fortunate
26 A student does an Internet search and
finds the following information.
Which website would be most helpful
for a student looking for information
on how Alcott’s family affected her
writing?
F The Complete Works of Louisa May
Alcott
G Modern Women Writers
H Novels and Movies: Little Women
J Putting Together Life and Writing:
Alcott 
The Complete Works of
Louisa May Alcott
Little Women: What It Means
Modern Women Writers
Novels and Movies: Little Women
Putting Together Life and
Writing: Alcott
Women and Writing
Keyword: Louisa May Alcott
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2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 10
Directions: Read the story and answer the questions that follow.
Strawberries
1 Several members from the Lansdale Garden Club came to Ben’s school to announce a “Container
Garden” contest. To enter, a student could grow any type of plant in a pot. In three months, the
Garden Club members would return to judge the plants. They would choose winners and award
gift certificates for plants and gardening supplies.
2 Ben’s grandmother loved working in her garden, and her birthday was coming up. If Ben won, he
could give her the gift certificate!
3 First, he checked out a gardening book from the library. It was full of colorful pictures. There were
daisy patches, rose beds, and ponds of water lilies. There were even pansies in pots. None of these
inspired Ben. He couldn’t decide what he wanted to grow.
4 In a shed behind his house, Ben found a bag of potting soil leaning against a wall. Next to the bag
was a funny-looking pot. It was knee high and measured about ten inches across the top. Sticking
out from the rounded sides of the pot were seven little pockets.
5 Ben went back to his gardening book and looked until he found a picture just like it. The pot was
called a strawberry jar. The picture showed strawberry plants with dark, fuzzy leaves, tiny white
blossoms, and ripe red fruit spilling from the top and the pockets.
6 Ben showed his mom the picture and asked, “Can I use the soil and pot that are in the shed? Then
I’ll only need to buy strawberry plants.”
7 His mom agreed and drove him to the garden shop. Ben had six dollars he had saved for
Grandma’s gift. He bought two six-packs of tiny strawberry plants and still had three dollars left.
8 At home Ben filled the pot with soil and tucked the long roots of the strawberry plants into the
soil-filled top and pockets. Since the plants were newly planted, he watered them every day.
9 He was disappointed when the green leaves started turning yellow. In the library book, Ben
looked in the chapter called “Troubleshooting.” He learned that too much water could cause yellow
leaves. The article suggested watering only when the soil felt dry.
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10 As he reviewed the book, Ben learned that his plants needed more than water. They also needed
nutrients to help them grow. Ben’s mother had two kinds of plant food. One was for leafy
houseplants, and the other was for plants with flowers, fruits, or vegetables. Ben began adding
the second kind of plant food to the water for the strawberry plants.
11 After a couple of weeks, white flowers began to appear. Ben continued caring for the plants. The
day for judging the contest finally arrived. The jar overflowed with healthy green leaves, papery
white blossoms, and bright-red strawberries. It was hard for the judges to find a place to attach
the deep-blue first place ribbon!
12 Grandma’s favorite birthday gift was the pot of strawberries. When she saw the gift certificate,
she told Ben they would share it. After all, they were both gardeners now!
27 The author included the second
paragraph because it —
A describes the garden club members
B explains what the contest prizes will be
C tells why Ben wanted to grow a plant 
D shows how long the contest will last
28 In paragraph 3, the word inspired
means —
F deserved
G comforted
H warned
J interested 
29 Ben decided on the plants he wanted
to grow when he —
A visited the garden shop
B remembered his mother had plant food
C saw a commercial about strawberries
D looked up a pot in the gardening book 
30 Ben solved his problem with the yellow
leaves by —
F changing how often he watered them 
G using a bigger pot
H changing their potting soil
J calling the garden shop
31 Which sentence is the best summary
for this passage?
A Ben used a library book that was full of
colorful pictures to help him decide
what he wanted to plant in a pot.
B Ben entered a plant-growing contest at
school, learned all about growing
strawberry plants, and won first place
with his strawberry jar entry. 
C Ben used the money he had saved to
buy two six-packs of tiny strawberry
plants with which to enter the contest.
D Ben had a problem, looked in a book to
find out what to do, and used plant food
so his plants would bear flowers and
fruit.
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32 The author most likely wrote this
passage to —
F convince readers to garden by
advertising plants
G entertain readers with an informative
story 
H give step-by-step instructions on how to
plant strawberries
J express a concern about mistakes made
in growing plants
33 What information from the passage
supports the idea that Ben loved his
grandmother?
A She loved working in her garden.
B Her birthday was coming up.
C If he won, he would give her the prize. 
D They were both gardeners.
34 If the author included more
information about what is needed for
growing plants, it would belong in
paragraph —
F 1
G 3
H 10 
J 11
This index page is from a book titled
Making Jellies and Jams From
Berries. Use it to answer the next
question.
35 If you wanted to know how many
strawberries you will need to make
two pints of strawberry jam, you
should look in the section entitled —
A Recipes 
B Choosing Your Berries
C Introduction
D Preparing Your Tools and Jars
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2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 13
Directions: Read the article and answer the questions that follow.
What’s for Dinner?
Rhonda Spatz Darnell
Zookeepers work hard to keep the animals happy and healthy.
1 Clatter, clank, chop-chop. It’s early morning, and the Sacramento Zoo will not open for a few
hours. But feeding the animals is a big job, and busy sounds are already coming from the zoo
kitchen.
2 Fresh fruits and vegetables are being chopped. Ground meat is thawing, and vitamins are being
measured out. Live mealworms and frozen crickets and mice are being prepared for some of the
zoo animals.
3 All of this happens in the zoo kitchen. It is a large room, about three times the size of a household
kitchen. The floor is made of cement, so it’s easy to hose down. The refrigerator and freezer are big
enough to walk into. Twice a week, trucks deliver enough food for 213 animals. It takes ten
zookeepers to prepare this food.
4 The workers at the Sacramento Zoo care about their animals. They know that their work is
important. Zoos help by breeding animals and protecting rare species from dying out. Zoos also
make it possible for people to learn about and enjoy wild animals. Zookeepers need to keep zoo
animals healthy and happy.
5 One of the hardest parts of the job is choosing healthy foods that the animals will like. How do
zookeepers know what to feed them? By doing lots of research!
6 Scientists study what animals eat in the wild. Zookeepers try to feed zoo animals the same foods,
but they might not be easy to find. Then, zookeepers serve similar foods that are just as healthy.
For instance, a wild wolf might catch a rabbit for dinner. That wolf eats rabbit meat, bones, and
organs. It also eats the plants the rabbit ate that day. So, a zoo wolf must be fed some plants along
with its diet of meat, bones, and organs.
7 Scientists also study the way animals eat. Some animals like to eat in groups. Others fight over
food, so they are fed alone.
8 Most zoos belong to groups that study animals and their needs. The zoos in these groups share
what they learn with other zoos. For example, a zoo that plans to get a koala can find out what
koalas are fed at other zoos. This information will help the zoo keep the new koala healthy.
9 Food can also be a zoo animal’s entertainment. In the wild, animals spend much of their time
looking for food. To prevent zoo animals from getting bored, many zookeepers give them treats to
keep them busy. A bear may be given peanuts buried in a box of sand. The bear must sniff and dig
to find the peanuts. Chimpanzees may be given sunflower seeds to crack open and eat or frozen
treats with fruit inside.
10 Zookeepers work hard to keep their animals happy, healthy, and able to breed. And just like
humans, animals stay healthy by eating right.
Copyright  1998 by Highlights for Children, Inc. Columbus, Ohio
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36 Which statement can be supported
with information in the first
paragraph?
F People must pay money to see the
animals in the zoo.
G Most of the food is cooked before it is
fed to the animals.
H People often spend all day visiting the
animals at the zoo.
J Some animals are fed before the zoo is
open to the public. 
37 Which question does paragraph 8
answer?
A Why do zoos belong to zoo groups? 
B What do koalas eat?
C Where are the other zoos located?
D Where do koalas come from?
38 In which word does -ment mean the
same as it does in entertainment?
F cement
G mention
H achievement 
J moment
39 Zookeepers bury peanuts in boxes of
sand so bears will —
A eat only a few at a time
B eat healthy foods
C have a place to put the peanut shells
D spend time looking for them 
40 “What’s for Dinner?” is mainly about —
F animals that fight over food
G when and where animal food is bought
H a zoo that has 213 animals
J how and what zoo animals are fed 
41 The author wrote this passage most
likely to —
A inform 
B advertise
C convince
D warn
42 To find the most current information
about the animals at the Sacramento
Zoo, you should look —
F in an encyclopedia under “Sacramento”
G in an encyclopedia under “zoos”
H on the website for the city of
Sacramento
J on the website for the Sacramento
Zoo 
SESSION: 40 PAGE: 15 5/12/04 14:21 LOGIN IS-debbie PATH: @sunultra1/raid/CLS_tpc/GRP_va_sprg04/JOB_04-ribsg05/DIV_g5rdg-1
R405C526
C
R405B521
C
R504A523
C
R506C526
C
R405D523
C
R404A514
C
R409B519
C
2004 Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education 15
Answer Key
Test
Sequence
Correct
Answer
Reporting
Category Reporting Category Description
1 C 001 Use word analysis strategies.
2 J 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
3 D 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
4 G 003 Understand elements of literature.
5 D 003 Understand elements of literature.
6 H 003 Understand elements of literature.
7 B 003 Understand elements of literature.
8 F 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
9 C 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
10 H 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
11 B 003 Understand elements of literature.
12 J 003 Understand elements of literature.
13 A 003 Understand elements of literature.
14 F 003 Understand elements of literature.
15 A 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
16 H 003 Understand elements of literature.
17 D 003 Understand elements of literature.
18 G 001 Use word analysis strategies.
19 C 001 Use word analysis strategies.
20 F 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
21 B 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
22 F 003 Understand elements of literature.
23 C 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
24 F 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
25 B 001 Use word analysis strategies.
26 J 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
27 C 003 Understand elements of literature.
28 J 001 Use word analysis strategies.
29 D 003 Understand elements of literature.
30 F 003 Understand elements of literature.
31 B 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
32 G 003 Understand elements of literature.
33 C 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
34 H 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
35 A 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
36 J 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
37 A 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
38 H 001 Use word analysis strategies.
39 D 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
40 J 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
41 A 003 Understand elements of literature.
42 J 002 Understand a variety of printed materials/resource materials.
SESSION: 41 PAGE: 16 5/12/04 14:36 LOGIN IS-debbie PATH: @sunultra1/raid/CLS_tpc/GRP_va_sprg04/JOB_04-ribsg05/DIV_g5rdg-1

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