Friday, March 9, 2012

Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own

Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own


Use the Who, What, Where, When, Why and How set of questions to unearth your student's understanding. Its a remarkable framework that enables you to truly generate instant free reading insight tests whenever you need them.

Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own

Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own

Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own


Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own



Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own

Use each word as a prompt to an endless amount of potential questions. It so simple, you can truly stand at the board and start creating. Ask yourself, what questions, that start with each key word, are possible? If you generate two questions for each key question, then you have a twelve examine test. If you generate five questions for each key question, then you have a thirty examine test. Remember questions that are open-ended (have many potential answers) require the most thinking from your students.

The questions below are examples of what can be created.
I have used "The Three wee Pigs" as the example story because it is universally known.
Of course, the questions can be used successfully on a much more involved story.

Who?
Who are the main characters in the story?
Who left home?
Who built the house of straw?
Who built the house of sticks?
Who built the house of bricks?
Who let his two brothers live with him?
Who were the Three wee Pigs afraid of?
Who would be worried about the Three wee Pigs?
Who builds our houses?

What?
What was the first house built of?
What was the second house built of?
What was the third house built of?
What did the Wolf want?
What did the Three wee Pigs want?
What did the Three wee Pig's mother want?
What did the Three wee Pig's neighbors think of what was happening?
What else could the Three wee Pigs have done to protect themselves?
What were The Three wee Pigs thinking when the Wolf was at the door?
What would you have done if you were one of the pigs?
What would you do if you were walking past a house and saw the Big Bad Wolf trying to blow it down?
What would you build your house out of (if you were able to build a house)?
What did the Wolf say each time he was about to blow a house down?
What would have happened if the Third wee Pig hadn't complete his brick house before the Wolf arrived?
What are our houses made of?

Where?
Where is the story of The Three wee Pigs set?
Where was the Three wee Pigs mother when all of this was happening?
Where were the police when all of this was happening?
Where did the Three wee Pigs build their houses?
Where would you build a house?
Where did the Big Bad Wolf come from?
Where did the Three wee Pigs live before they built their houses?

When?
When did all of this take place?
When did the Three wee Pigs leave home?
When did the Big Bad Wolf arrive?
When did the First wee Pig move in with the Second wee Pig?
When did the Second wee Pig move in with the Third wee Pig?
When will you be old sufficient to build a house?

Why?
Why did the Three wee Pigs leave home?
Why did they each build there own house instead of one together.
Why did the Big Bad Wolf pick the Three wee Pigs to pick on?
Why did the house of straw fall down?
Why did the house of sticks fall down?
Why did the house of bricks stay standing?
Why did the Three wee Pigs stay in their houses instead of running away?

How?
How do you think the Three wee Pigs learnt to build houses?
How did the Three wee Pigs get rid of the Big Bad Wolf?
How many dissimilar endings to this story have you heard of?
How else could it end?
How would you like it to end?
How would you get rid of a Wolf at the door?
How could you convert the story to make it have a sad ending?
How is this story similar to Cinderella?
How is this story dissimilar from Cinderella?
How potential is it for a pig to truly build a house?
How potential is it for a wolf to truly blow a house down?

That's more than fifty questions I can pick from. You can use the same method to generate your own free reading insight tests.

Free Reading comprehension Tests - A easy and Quick Way to Make Your Own

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