Question Types
Informational Writing
Argumentative Writing
Narrative Writing
Research
100

Sometimes called multiple-choice, is a question, problem, or statement that is followed by four answer choices.

Selected Response

100

conclude based on evidence found in the passage

Infer

100

Main statement of a text, which is in the introduction

Argument

100

A real or imaginary story about a situation, moment in time, or series of events. Events are what a character senses through five senses.

Narrative

100

Refers to, a book, an article, website, person, or media that contains information

Source

200

Asks a question, and students provide a response that they construct. This should be written in the RACECES format.

Short constructed-response

200

Overview of a passage . It captures the main points but does not give every detail and does not include opinions

Objective Summary

200

A argument that opposes the claim

Counterclaim

200

The person the writer chooses to tell a story

Narrator

200

When a writer uses the evidence and facts from the source to support reasoning and persuade the audience to agree with the writer’s claim, the writer gains

Credibility

300

A type of constructed-response that requires a longer, detailed response. This should include dialogue, figurative language, and sensory language.

Extended constructed response item

300

Refers to the symbolic meaning of words or phrases. EXAMPLE: Personification, simile, metaphor, hyperbole, idiom

Figurative Language

300

Introduction paragraph, two body paragraphs, a counterclaim and rebuttal paragraph, and a conclusion paragraph.

Argumentative Outline

300

The perspective a writer chooses to tell a story

Point Of View

300

To use someone else’s ideas and to express those ideas in your own words.

Paraphrasing

400

Found in Section 1 of the ELA assessment. Students are expected to develop an informative/explanatory response based on two passages.

Extended writing-response

400

A meaning beyond the explicit meaning of a word. 

Connotation

400

For a claim to be effective, it must be supported with evidence and reasoning

Credible

400

Tools used to create experiences, events, characters.

Narrative Techniques

400

Presenting the words, works, or ideas of someone else as though they are one’s own and without providing attribution to the author.

Plagiarism

500

Scored on a seven-point scale

The extended writing-response task

500

The attitude of an author. The author will choose words to express a viewpoint.

Tone

500

Writer chooses language that matches the audience and purpose and avoids informal language.

Formal Language

500

Concrete words and phrases that allows the reader to experience the way things are sight, sound, smell, taste, touch

Sensory Language/ Imagery

500

The way the author tells details or information included in the text that come from another source.

Citation

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