REA REA REA REA: Ding Ding Ding Ding
REA REA REA REA: Ding Ding Ding Ding
REA REA REA REA: Ding Ding Ding Ding
Grade
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B O O K L E T
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Section Reading
A2 page 2
Over Where?
Sometimes I gaze up
and see clouds a-moving.
I’m tempted to ask them
just what they are proving.
Proving what? Where? 5
GO TO Language A2
ANSWERS
Section Reading
B1 page 4
Moving trails of ants often stretch over 30 metres long as they move across the forest floor 3
and up and down the trunks of trees. However, while seemingly destructive, these ants are
doing the forest floor a service. The chunks of leaves, combined with ant waste, provide
a compost pile that grows fungus. This fungus, in turn, provides the topsoil with valuable
nutrients that nourish forest plants. And by pruning vegetation, the ants promote new plant
growth as well.
While their eating habits seem careless, the leafcutter ants’ society is quite highly organized. 4
Their colony is well-structured and efficient, with various “orders” of ants responsible for
specific tasks for the benefit of the whole colony. The queen lays the eggs, and small worker
ants care for them and grow the fungus. Larger worker ants collect the leaves, and soldier
ants defend the colony. As you can see, these ants really “cut it.”
GO TO Language B1
ANSWERS
Section Reading
C1 page 5
Once the roof was replaced, it was time to install the shingles. I steadied the ladder while 15
Uncle Daniel climbed onto the roof. My job was to pass up the shingles.
“Johnny, could you pass me the vise grips?” Uncle Daniel called down. 16
I rooted around in the big tool bag, even though I had no idea what I was looking for. Feeling 17
a little embarrassed, I had to ask, “Um . . . what do they look like?”
“Oh, sorry, Johnny,” replied Uncle Daniel. “I shouldn’t have 18
assumed. The head of the tool looks like pincers and it has two
handles that you squeeze tightly. They’re used for gripping
things. I think the ones I need have blue handles.”
“Oh, here—exactly as described,” and I tossed them up to him. I 19
was learning fast, and only one afternoon had gone by!
At dinner, I sat down to a big home-cooked meal, and was I hungry! I couldn’t wait to text 20
my parents about my first day.
“Tomorrow we’ll pull up some boards from the deck and prepare to resurface them,” Uncle 21
Daniel announced after dinner.
But that evening, a storm hit with heavy rain and lightning. The next day, the deck boards 22
were too wet to work on, so Uncle Daniel and I set to work cutting saplings that were growing
too close to the house. The land sloped steeply away from the house toward the creek,
so standing on the slope was precarious and required good balance. “No problem,” I said
confidently. It turns out I was also getting a good workout as I removed the unwanted trees.
While I worked on the brush, Uncle Daniel cut down two 23
damaged birch trees. “Excellent firewood,” he remarked, as
his chainsaw transformed the trunks into logs. I lugged them
back to stack in the woodpile.
Every morning that week, my uncle and I worked together 24
and took the afternoons to relax and go fishing. When I
crawled into bed each night, my fingers throbbed and my
muscles ached as I drifted off to sleep exhausted.
Can I ache so much and still be enjoying this? 25
By the week’s end, the shed had a new cupola, land was cleared, wood was stacked for the 26
winter, and work was started on the deck.
“Can I come back some weekends this fall?” I asked as I prepared to return home. “There’s 27
still a lot to do around here.”
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ANSWERS
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