LS English 8 Diagnostic Check
LS English 8 Diagnostic Check
LS English 8 Diagnostic Check
Name Date
Diagnostic check
Part 1: Non-fiction
Section A: Reading
Spend around 20 minutes on this section.
Read the text below, then answer questions 1–8.
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CAMBRIDGE LOWER SECONDARY ENGLISH 8: DIAGNOSTIC CHECK
[1]
[1]
3 Give one phrase from lines 1–5 which suggests that cycling is not usually a suitable
way of travelling long distances.
[1]
4 Explain, using your own words, the benefit of allowing bicycles on trains and buses
(lines 10–11).
[1]
5 Give two pieces of evidence from lines 12–19 which show that cycling helps people to
keep physically fitter.
[2]
6 What structural feature is ‘Make sure you start looking for one now!’ (lines 20–21) an
example of?
[1]
7 How is the last paragraph (lines 20–23) different from the rest of the text and what is the
effect of this?
Difference:
Effect:
[2]
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Section B: Writing
Spend around 20 minutes on this section.
1 Write a talk for your class about how to keep fit and healthy. You should write
three paragraphs.
You could consider:
• the importance of keeping fit and healthy
• ways of getting regular exercise
• how friends and family can keep fit and healthy together. [10]
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CAMBRIDGE LOWER SECONDARY ENGLISH 8: DIAGNOSTIC CHECK
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CAMBRIDGE LOWER SECONDARY ENGLISH 8: DIAGNOSTIC CHECK
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CAMBRIDGE LOWER SECONDARY ENGLISH 8: DIAGNOSTIC CHECK
Part 2: Fiction
Section A: Reading
Spend around 20 minutes on this section.
Read the text below (an extract from The Silver Box by Louise Lawrence), then answer
questions 1–6.
Lonely and boring, the hours stretched endlessly ahead. She might have
switched on the radio or studied her school books, but listening to music
made her headache worse and she could not concentrate. Curled with the
cat she tried to sleep but then she grew hot and sweaty and small sounds
5 distracted her . . . the whine of the wind down the boarded-up chimney,
the flutter of snow against the window pane, and the creak of a
floorboard. It was as if someone were there, quietly moving at the far end
of her room. Carole raised her head. She saw nothing unusual . . . just a
shimmer of heated air above the electric convector heater and the walls
10 receding into distances, the effects of her fever. But the sounds went on,
movements and footsteps, soft and disturbing. And did she imagine the
room growing dark?
There was a humming noise too, like a high-frequency static almost
beyond the range of her hearing. Once more Carole raised her head and
15 for one panic-stricken moment she thought she was going blind. There
was light around her bed, but the rest of the room had vanished, dissolved
in a curtain of shimmering air and darkness beyond it. Or maybe
something was wrong with the convector heater? The electronic hum was
clearer now, increasing in pitch. Even the cat could hear it. And they
20 moved together, Carole and Splodge, propelled by the same fear. He rose
from the bed with green eyes blazing, arched and spat and bolted for the
door, his tail bushed as a fox’s brush . . .
Glossary
brush: tail
1 Give one phrase from lines 1–3 that tells you time seems to be going slowly for Carole.
[1]
2 Give two pieces of evidence from lines 1–12 that show Carole isn’t feeling well.
• [2]
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metaphor
rhyme
simile
personification [1]
4 Give one structural feature used to build up tension in lines 8–12 (from ‘Carole raised …’)
and explain its effect.
Feature:
Effect:
[2]
5 Which two features from the text suggest that it is from a mystery story?
Tick () two boxes.
use of a flashback
unexplained noises
a lonely setting
6 Suggest two ways that the writer uses language or structure to describe the cat’s
fear in lines 19–22.
[2]
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CAMBRIDGE LOWER SECONDARY ENGLISH 8: DIAGNOSTIC CHECK
Section B: Writing
Spend around 20 minutes on this section.
1 Write a story about a locked door. You should write three paragraphs.
You should consider:
• where your story is set
• what characters to include in your story. [10]
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CAMBRIDGE LOWER SECONDARY ENGLISH 8: DIAGNOSTIC CHECK
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