
SPECIFIC SUPPORT I
Quiz by WATCHAREE KULPRASIT
Feel free to use or edit a copy
includes Teacher and Student dashboards
Measure skillsfrom any curriculum
Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
- edit the questions
- save a copy for later
- start a class game
- automatically assign follow-up activities based on students’ scores
- assign as homework
- share a link with colleagues
- print as a bubble sheet
- Q1
My three-year-old son was in a stubborn mood today.
When I asked him to stop playing in the yard and come indoors, he looked me squarely in the eye and shouted “No!” and then spelled it out, “N . . . O!”
When I asked him to do something, he gave me nothing but trouble. He seemed determined to make things difficult for me, for he had his mind made up.
60s - Q2
The prices in the amusement park were outrageously high.
The cost of the log flume, a ride that lasts roughly three minutes, was ten dollars a person. Then I had to pay four dollars for an eight-ounce cup of Coke and six dollars for a hot dog.
The food seemed to cost twice as much as it would in a supermarket and was sometimes of poor quality. The rides also cost a lot, and so I had to tell the children that they were limited to a certain number of them.
60s - Q3
My brother-in-law is accident prone.
Once he tried to open a tube of Krazy Glue with his teeth. When the cap came loose, glue squirted out and sealed his lips shut. They had to be pried open in a hospital emergency room.
Even when he does seemingly simple jobs, he seems to get into trouble. This can lead to hilarious, but sometimes dangerous, results. Things never seem to go right for him, and he often needs the help of others to get out of one predicament or another
60s - Q4
The so-called bargains at the yard sale were junk.
The tables were filled with useless stuff no one could possibly want. They were the kinds of things that should be thrown away, not sold.
The “bargains” included two headless dolls, blankets filled with holes, scorched potholders, and a plastic Christmas tree with several branches missing.
60s - Q5
The key to success in college is organization.
Organized students never forget paper or exam dates, which are marked on a calendar above their desks. And instead of having to cram for exams, they study their clear, neat classroom and textbook notes on a daily basis.
It is a big help for students to know what they are doing, when they have to do it, and so on. A system is crucial in achieving an ordered approach to study. Otherwise, things become very disorganized, and it is not long before grades will begin to drop.
60s