Gr3 ELA
Gr3 ELA
Gr3 ELA
Session 1 included three reading selections, followed by multiple-choice, short-response, and open-response
questions.
Session 2A included two reading selections, followed by multiple-choice and short-response questions.
Session 2B, the Narrative Writing section, included a single reading selection, followed by four evidence-based
selected-response items and a narrative writing response. The items in Session 2B were developed by the
Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC). Students performance on
Session 2B will not be factored into their MCAS scores.
Session 1 and Session 2A contained the common test items on which each students 2016 MCAS ELA score will be
based. Some reading selections from these sessions are shown on the following pages, along with approximately half of
the common test items. The selections and items are shown as they appeared in test & answer booklets.
The reading selection and items from Session 2B, the PARCC Narrative Writing section, are not being released in this
document. The Department will post information about these items to the Student Assessment webpage in a separate
document. See page 4 of the Introduction to this document for more information about the inclusion of PARCC items
in the 2016 MCAS tests.
Reference Materials
During all ELA test sessions, the use of bilingual word-to-word dictionaries was allowed for current and former English
language learner students only. No other reference materials were allowed during any ELA test session.
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Grade 3 English Language Arts
DIRECTIONS
This session contains two reading selections with multiple-choice, short-response, and open-response
questions. For multiple-choice questions, mark your answers by filling in the circle next to the best
answer. For short-response and open-response questions, write your answer in the space below the
question.
Tony Sarg was a puppet maker who worked with marionettes, small wooden puppets that are moved by
strings. Read the passage about Tony Sarg, and then answer the questions that follow.
BALLOONS
OVER
BROADWAY
by Melissa Sweet
F
1 rom the time he was a
little boy, Tony Sarg loved
to figure out how to make
things move. He once said he
became a marionette man when
he was only six years old.
2 His father had asked him to feed
their chickens at six-thirty in the
morningevery day. Tony had an
ideawhat if he could feed the
chickens without leaving his bed?
3 He rigged up some pulleys and
ran rope from the chicken coop door to his bedroom window. That night, he spread
chicken feed outside the chicken coop door.
4 The next morning . . . Tony pulled on the rope, and the door to the chicken coop
opened! The chickens ate their breakfast, Tony stayed snug in his bed, and his dad,
so impressed, never made Tony do another chore.
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5 When Tony grew up he moved to London, where he discovered that no one was
making marionettes for kids anymore. So out of wood, cloth, and strings, Tony
began to make puppets. He figured out ways to make his marionettes movement
so lifelike that they performed as if they were real actors. Word soon spread about
Tonys amazing marionettes. When Tony moved to New York City, the Tony Sarg
Marionettes began performing on Broadway.
6 In the heart of New York City, in Herald Square, was the biggest store on earth:
R. H. Macys department store. Macys had heard about Tonys puppets and asked
him to design a puppet parade for the stores holiday windows. So Tony made
new puppets based on storybook characters, then attached them to gears and
pulleys to make them move.
7 In Macys Wondertown windows, Tonys mechanical marionettes danced across
the stage as if by magic. All day long they performed to shoppers jostling for a
better look.
8 But Macys had an even bigger job in store for Tony.
9 Many of the people working at Macys were immigrants, and as the holidays
approached, they missed their own holiday traditions. . . . Macys agreed to put on
a parade for their employees, and they hired Tony to help.
10 Tony too was an immigrant. . . . He loved the idea of creating a parade based on
street carnivals from all over the world. He made costumes and built horse-drawn
floats, and Macys even arranged to bring in bears, elephants, and camels from the
Central Park Zoo.
11 The animals joined hundreds of Macys employees on Thanksgiving Day, 1924,
winding their way from Harlem to Herald Square. It was a dazzling parade!
12 In fact, Macys first parade was such a success that they decided to have one every
year on Thanksgiving Dayto celebrate Americas own holiday.
13 Each year the parade grew. But when Macys brought in lions and tigersin
addition to the bears, elephants, and camelsthe animals roared and growled and
frightened the children.
14 Macys asked Tony to replace the animals.
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15 Tony hoped to replace the animals with some kind of puppets, but his marionettes
were less than three feet tall. He would have to make much larger puppets in order
for them to be seen in the parade. And how
could he make them strong enough to hold up
in bad weather yet light enough to move up
and down the streets?
16 Tony knew of a company in Ohio that made
blimps* out of rubberthe perfect material
for any weather. When he called the company
and showed them his sketches, they agreed to
make what Tony wanted.
17 Still, how would Tony make his big puppets
move?
An Indonesian rod puppet
18 Then Tony had an ideafrom an Indonesian
rod puppet in his toy collection.
19 On Thanksgiving Day, Tonys creatures, some as high as sixteen feet, spilled into
the streets, and the crowds cheered wildly.
20 Part puppet, part balloon, the air-filled rubber bags wobbled down the avenues,
propped up by wooden sticks.
21 But now the sidewalks were so packed with people that only those in the first
few rows could really see the parade. Tony realized his puppets would have to
be even bigger and higher off the
ground. And though the sticks helped
to steer the puppets, they were stiff
and heavy. Tony wanted his balloons
to articulateto move and gesture
more like puppets. But how?
22 With a marionette, the controls are
above and the puppet hangs down . . .
*
blimps large, balloon-like aircraft
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23 But what if the controls were below and the puppet could rise up?
24 During the next year, Tony set his new idea into motion.
25 This time, he asked the company in Ohio to make balloons out of rubberized
silkas strong as rubber but lighter than rubber alone.
26 Most important, Tony ordered the balloons to be filled not just with air but with
helium too. Since helium is lighter than air, it would make the balloons rise.
27 Once the puppets were completed, they were deflated and shipped back to Tony in
New York.
28 Tony did not know if everything would go as planned . . .
29 It was still dark on Thanksgiving morning when Tony filled the balloons with
helium, tethering them down with sandbags.
30 By one p.m. the sidewalks were packed with people ready for the parade. Then,
one by one, Tony cut the lines to the sandbags . . .
31 LETS have a PARADE!
Balloons Over Broadway by Melissa Sweet. Text and illustrations copyright 2011 by Melissa Sweet. Reprinted by permission of Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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English Language Arts
Mark your choices for multiple-choice questions 1 through 10 by filling in the circle next to the best
answer.
ID:308862 C Common ID:308866 A Common
C how the invention was supposed A Live animals bored some people.
to work
B Live animals scared some people.
D why feeding chickens was done in
C Live animals cost too much
the morning
to use.
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ID:308873 B Common ID:308879 B Common
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ID:308867 B Common ID:308883 D Common
B decided
C every
D holiday
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11 Based on the passage, explain how the author shows that Tony was a clever person. Support
your answer with important information from the passage.
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Read the article and the poem about penguins, and then answer the questions that follow.
Penguins
by Melvin and Gilda Berger
1 Penguins live on the ice of the Antarctic. They have wingsyet they
cant fly! But the penguins are terrific swimmers and divers. They plunge
into the icy ocean to catch their meals of fish, squid, and krill. Some can
stay underwater for up to six minutes.
2 After a long dive, penguins shoot up out of the water. They look like
rockets being launched. The birds gulp a quick breath of air. Then they
splash back down into the water.
3 Sometimes the penguins leap onto the ice. Once there, penguins are slow
and clumsy walkers. But they have a way to move quickly. They drop onto
their bellies and push themselves forward with feet and flippers. ZOOM!
Away they go, sliding across the ice!
4 The biggest penguins of all are the emperor penguins. They are about as
tall and heavy as third graders! Like other penguins, they spend most of
their time diving for food. When it is time to nest, they jump out of the
water and plop on the ice.
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5 Each female lays a single egg on the ice. Then she heads back to the
water. Her mate rolls the egg onto his feet and covers it with a flap of skin.
Then he joins other males in a large circle. They huddle together to keep
warm.
6 The males keep the eggs on their feet for a couple of months. During
that time they do not eat. They lose about half their weight. Finally, the
eggs hatch and the chicks are born.
7 By now, the females are back. They take over the care of the chicks. The
males march off to the ocean. There, they fill their empty stomachs with
food.
8 In a few weeks, the males return with food. Now both parents feed and
protect their chicks. Six months later, the offspring are fully grown. Off
they go. Theyre big enough to care for themselves.
My Fathers Feet
To keep myself up off the ice,
I find my fathers feet are nice.
I snuggle in his belly fluff,
And thats how I stay warm enough.
My Fathers Feet by Judy Sierra, from Antarctic Antics: A Book of Penguin Poems. Text copyright 1998 by Judy Sierra. Reprinted by
permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Photograph copyright iStockphoto/KeithSzafranski.
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English Language Arts
Mark your choices for multiple-choice questions 12 through 16 by filling in the circle next to the best
answer.
ID:303620 C Common ID:303624 B Common
A Big Birds
B On the Move
C On Their Own
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ID:303626 A Common ID:303629 C Common
B turn
C dive
D look
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Question 17 is a short-response question. Write your answer to question 17 in the lined space below.
ID:303634 Common
17 In My Fathers Feet, explain how the young penguins feelings change throughout the poem.
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Grade 3 English Language Arts
Spring 2016 Released Items:
Reporting Categories, Standards, and Correct Answers*
Correct Answer
Item No. Page No. Reporting Category Standard
(MC)*
1 11 Reading 3 C
2 11 Reading 7 C
3 11 Reading 2 A
4 11 Reading 3 B
5 12 Reading 2 B
6 12 Reading 1 C
7 12 Reading 3 B
8 12 Reading 3 C
9 13 Language 5 B
10 13 Language 1 D
11 14 Reading 2
12 17 Reading 2 C
13 17 Reading 5 B
14 17 Reading 3 B
15 18 Reading 3 A
16 18 Language 4 C
17 19 Reading 3
* Answers are provided here for multiple-choice items only. Sample responses and scoring guidelines for short-response and
open-response items, which are indicated by the shaded cells, will be posted to the Departments website later this year.
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Grade 3 English Language Arts
Spring 2016 Unreleased Common Items:
Reporting Categories and Standards
18 Reading 3
19 Reading 3
20 Reading 1
21 Reading 5
22 Reading 5
23 Language 2
24 Reading 2
25 Reading 3
26 Reading 8.a
27 Reading 3
28 Reading 3
29 Reading 3
30 Reading 1
31 Reading 2
32 Language 4
33 Language 5
34 Language 4
35 Reading 3
36 Reading 3
37 Reading 3
38 Language 5
39 Reading 2
40 Reading 8.a
41 Language 4
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