Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts : Reading to Cite Textual Evidence

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts

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All Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts Resources

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Example Question #42 : Reading

Passage 1:

Encouraging the participation of video games in children and teenagers is a dangerous practice. These video games are often violent and thus promote violence in everyday life. Such games have also been shown to encourage violence and anger problems in those already inclined toward violence. At an age at which it is important to foster cooperation among classmates and build friendships, the isolation that comes with excessive gaming makes students more likely to enter conflicts with other students and harms their ability to socialize. 

Video games have also been shown to be addictive. This trait makes gaming all the more dangerous, as an exclusive focus on any one hobby can leave children without a well-rounded set of interests and skills. Those playing video games would benefit from other extracurriculars, such as arts or athletics. When children spend all their time playing video games, that leaves less time for more-productive tasks like joining a sport, learning to play an instrument, or picking up other more beneficial hobbies. Parents would be wise to discourage their children from playing video games and instead suggest they pick up a more constructive hobby. 


Passage 2:

Video games are often (and unfairly) blamed for negatively impacting children, but in reality, they offer many benefits to those who choose “gaming” as a hobby. Studies show that children who play video games improve their motor skills, reasoning ability, and creative problem-solving when they do so. Additionally, evidence shows us that many find playing video games to be a way to socialize with friends and even build leadership skills, including how to delegate, work as a team, and prioritize tasks. Some have even linked these higher-order thinking skills to career success down the road. 

People who would villainize gaming claim that violent games make kids more violent. However, there is little, if any, evidence to show any connection between actions performed in a simulated game and tendencies in real life. In fact, many report that they find playing such games to be stress-relieving, and say that these activities positively impact their mood. 

While it is important to limit kids’ daily consumption of any hobby, video games can be a great way to encourage their creative problem solving, leadership, and other valuable life skills!

 

Which of the following pair of excerpts from Passages 1 & 2 best support the main idea of each author?

 

Possible Answers:

Passage 1: Those playing video games would benefit from other extracurriculars, such as arts or athletics. Passage 2: Studies show that children who play video games improve their motor skills, reasoning ability, and creative problem-solving when they do so.

Passage 1: Video games are often violent, and thus promote violence in everyday life. Passage 2: There is little, if any, evidence to show any connection between actions performed in a simulated game and tendencies in real life.

Passage 1: Parents would be wise to discourage their children from playing video games and instead suggest they pick up a more constructive hobby. Passage 2: Video games can be a great way to encourage creative problem solving, leadership, and other valuable life skills!

Passage 1: Video games have also been shown to be addictive Passage 2: Video games are often (and unfairly) blamed for negatively impacting children.

Correct answer:

Passage 1: Parents would be wise to discourage their children from playing video games and instead suggest they pick up a more constructive hobby. Passage 2: Video games can be a great way to encourage creative problem solving, leadership, and other valuable life skills!

Explanation:

Here, we need a pair of excerpts that each support the main idea or claim of each argument. Passage 1 attempts to claim that video games are potentially harmful, and tries to convince parents that they should seek out other, more beneficial, hobbies for their children. This is summarized in the conclusion sentence of the passage: “Parents would be wise to discourage their children from playing video games and instead suggest they pick up a more constructive hobby.” Passage 2 makes the claim that video games can be beneficial as a hobby, as addressed in the closing sentence of the passage: “Video games can be a great way to encourage their creative problem solving, leadership, and other valuable life skills!” While our other answer choices are in the passages, they don’t completely address the primary purpose of the passage. For instance, “those playing video games would benefit from other extracurriculars, such as arts or athletics” is supported by the author of the passage, but doesn’t encompass why the passage was written.

Example Question #43 : Reading

When you hear the word “pirate,” you likely think of names such as Blackbeard or Henry Morgan. However, there exists a vast and interesting history of lesser-known pirates who have also shaped the term as we know it, and this history is just as deserving of our attention. 

For instance, in the fifteenth century, the pirate Pier Gerlofs Donia, better known as “Big Pier,” fought tirelessly against the Roman Empire and intimidated even the most fierce soldiers with the seven-foot long sword he wielded, known as the “Zweihander.” When his crew captured a suspected enemy ship, he was known to determine friend from foe by forcing them to say: “Butter, bread, and green cheese: if you can’t say that, you’re not a real Frisian!” in his native tongue, as this was often difficult for enemies to pronounce correctly. Enemies who were unable to do so were sentenced to their doom!

Seventeenth-century dutch pirate Laurens de Graaf is also an interesting story. While he is best known for his ship, the Tigre, and for evading capture and disappearing into mystery and myth, he was supposedly an interesting pirate to work for! Known as the “gentleman’s outlaw,” de Graff would travel the seas with an arrangement of violins and trumpets, which he would play for his crew to keep spirits high.

Samuel Bellamy’s life poses yet another interesting, though ultimately tragic, story. When treasure hunter Bellamy found it difficult to make a living, he turned to piracy. Bellamy was known as a just captain and even formed a democracy on his ship, earning the trust and respect of his men. Bellamy was also known as the wealthiest pirate ever, and in the short year or so that he roamed the seas, he acquired over $120 million in treasure. This wealth would be short-lived, however, as Bellamy and his ship sank to the bottom of the deep blue on their way back from the heist that would have allowed his entire crew to retire and live out the rest of their lives in peace. 

It is true that many of the icons we see in today’s movies, novels, and costumes come from some of history’s most well-known pirates. Nevertheless, those interested in knowing the full history and culture of what we know as “piracy” today should seek out the stories behind some of the world’s lesser-known tyrants of the sea.

 

Which of the following is cited as direct support to the claim that “Bellamy was known as a just captain”?

 

Possible Answers:

He began as a treasure hunter.

His heist would have allowed his entire crew to retire in peace.

He formed a democracy on his ship.

He was the wealthiest pirate ever.

Correct answer:

He formed a democracy on his ship.

Explanation:

While all answer choices are true statements that are included in the passage, only one addresses why Bellamy was considered a “just” or fair captain. In the passage, the author uses the fact that Bellamy “formed a democracy on his ship, earning the trust and respect of his men,” to directly support the claim that “Bellamy was known as a just captain.”

Example Question #41 : Key Ideas And Details

When you hear the word “pirate,” you likely think of names such as Blackbeard or Henry Morgan. However, there exists a vast and interesting history of lesser-known pirates who have also shaped the term as we know it, and this history is just as deserving of our attention. 

For instance, in the fifteenth century, the pirate Pier Gerlofs Donia, better known as “Big Pier,” fought tirelessly against the Roman Empire and intimidated even the most fierce soldiers with the seven-foot long sword he wielded, known as the “Zweihander.” When his crew captured a suspected enemy ship, he was known to determine friend from foe by forcing them to say: “Butter, bread, and green cheese: if you can’t say that, you’re not a real Frisian!” in his native tongue, as this was often difficult for enemies to pronounce correctly. Enemies who were unable to do so were sentenced to their doom!

Seventeenth-century dutch pirate Laurens de Graaf is also an interesting story. While he is best known for his ship, the Tigre, and for evading capture and disappearing into mystery and myth, he was supposedly an interesting pirate to work for! Known as the “gentleman’s outlaw,” de Graff would travel the seas with an arrangement of violins and trumpets, which he would play for his crew to keep spirits high.

Samuel Bellamy’s life poses yet another interesting, though ultimately tragic, story. When treasure hunter Bellamy found it difficult to make a living, he turned to piracy. Bellamy was known as a just captain and even formed a democracy on his ship, earning the trust and respect of his men. Bellamy was also known as the wealthiest pirate ever, and in the short year or so that he roamed the seas, he acquired over $120 million in treasure. This wealth would be short-lived, however, as Bellamy and his ship sank to the bottom of the deep blue on their way back from the heist that would have allowed his entire crew to retire and live out the rest of their lives in peace. 

It is true that many of the icons we see in today’s movies, novels, and costumes come from some of history’s most well-known pirates. Nevertheless, those interested in knowing the full history and culture of what we know as “piracy” today should seek out the stories behind some of the world’s lesser-known tyrants of the sea.

 

Which of the following is not cited as an interesting fact about a lesser-known pirate in the passage?

Possible Answers:

The wealthiest pirate ever known retired in peace after his biggest heist.

One such pirate had an interest in playing musical instruments for his crew.

One pirate used pronunciation as a way to identify enemies.

Some pirates developed systems for making decisions aboard the ship.

Correct answer:

The wealthiest pirate ever known retired in peace after his biggest heist.

Explanation:

In this example, we can use the process of elimination to identify the facts that are included and thus, the one that isn’t. “One such pirate had an interest in playing musical instruments for his crew” refers to Laurens de Graaf and his trumpeting and violin playing for the crew. “Some pirates developed systems for making decisions aboard the ship” addresses the fact that Bellamy created a democracy on the ship in order to have a fair way to make decisions. “One pirate used pronunciation as a way to identify enemies” refers to Pier Gerlofs Donia and his habit of asking suspected enemies to recite his strange Frisian phrase. However, while “The wealthiest pirate ever known retired in peace after his biggest heist” might sound familiar… if we look back to the passage we can see that “Bellamy and his ship sank to the bottom of the deep blue on their way back from the heist that would have allowed his entire crew to retire and live out the rest of their lives in peace.” So, Bellamy certainly did not retire in peace… he perished in the bottom of the deep blue!

 

Example Question #45 : Reading

As technology continues to advance, relics of much earlier innovations remain in the terms we use to describe today’s tech. These terms, often referred to as “technological fossil words,” have outlived their meaning, but are still used in conversation today. 

Perhaps the most well-known example of a technological fossil word is the term “DJ” or “Disc Jockey.” The term originated in a time when a DJ actually “jockeyed,” the machine playing a disc or record. Nowadays, a Disc Jockey is almost never seen with an actual disc, but the name lives on!

Technological fossil words have also found their way into the language we use to describe phone use. When operators of the original phone that coined most of the terms we use today made a call, they would “dial” by turning an actual dial of rotating numbers. When they would “hang up,” they would physically hang the phone up on the wall, at which point the phone's pressure on the latch it hung on would end the call. Even the terms phone line and cell phone refer to aspects of telephone use that no longer apply today.

One of the most interesting and lesser-known of these technological fossil words is the term “soap opera.” Today, this term refers broadly to dramatic television programs. However, the history of the term comes from the radio dramas once sponsored by soap companies to entice housewives listening in during the day to purchase their products. 

From typing messages to “pen pals,” to “filming” a video, technological fossil words give us a glimpse into the history behind the tech we use today!

 

Which of the following excerpts contributes the least toward informing the reader about what a “technological fossil word” refers to?

 

Possible Answers:

When they would “hang up,” they would physically hang the phone up on the wall, at which point the phone's pressure on the latch it hung on would end the call.

Technological fossil words have also found their way into the language we use to describe phone use.

The term originated in a time when a DJ actually “jockeyed,” the machine playing a disc or record.

The history of the term comes from the radio dramas once sponsored by soap companies to entice housewives listening in during the day to purchase their products.

Correct answer:

Technological fossil words have also found their way into the language we use to describe phone use.

Explanation:

Here, we can eliminate any answer choice that helps explain the history behind the term “technological fossil word.” The answer choices that explain the history behind the terms DJ, hang up, and soap opera all support the reader’s understanding of the meaning. However, broadly saying that “technological fossil words have also found their way into the language we use to describe phone use,” does not indicate to the reader how the term “technological fossil word” is relevant to the context of phone use, or the meaning of the term as a whole.

Example Question #46 : Reading

When you hear the phrase “man’s best friend,” you probably think of one animal, and one animal alone: the dog. But why is that? How did dogs come to earn the name “man’s best friend,” and why has the name stuck around since?

Many historians trace the relationship between man and dog back more than 30,000 years, to when wolves used to scavenge alongside humans. Other historians cite the point when dogs and people began living together, around 15,000 years ago, as the start of this friendship. 

Literature from long ago also references the friendship between man and dog, most famously in Homer’s The Odyssey. However, it wasn’t until the 1700s when King Frederick of Prussia coined the term that dogs were formally given the position “best friend to man.” Frederick referred to his friendship with his dogs in a way that was unusual at the time. While pet dogs were common for those of his rank and stature, they were normally used for hunting and protecting, and it would be considered strange to speak of them as “friends.” Frederick, however, was so fond of his dogs that he had portraits of them painted, spoke often of their loyalty, and even requested that he be buried next to them when he was laid to rest. 

It is this strange but enduring relationship with “man’s best friend” that has stood the test of time. Today, dogs are often thought of for their loyalty and companionship. Studies even suggest that a canine companion can increase one’s lifespan, lower cardiovascular disease, and improve mental health. Even if you don’t share Frederick’s opinion that companionship with a dog is the only way to be truly “free of cares,” there’s no arguing that dogs have earned the title “man’s best friend” over the thousands of years they have stood by man’s side.

 

Which of the following sentences provides the strongest support for the following statement?

“Though dogs have been companions to humans for thousands of years, the origin of the term ‘man’s best friend’ as we know it today developed far more recently.”

Possible Answers:

Frederick, however, was so fond of his dogs that he had portraits of them painted, spoke often of their loyalty, and even requested that he be buried next to them when he was laid to rest.

However, it wasn’t until the 1700s when King Frederick of Prussia coined the term that dogs were formally given the position “best friend to man.”

Other historians cite the point when dogs and people began living together, around 15,000 years ago, as the start of this friendship.

Literature from long ago also references the friendship between man and dog, most famously in Homer’s The Odyssey.

When you hear the phrase “man’s best friend,” you probably think of one animal, and one animal alone: the dog.

Correct answer:

However, it wasn’t until the 1700s when King Frederick of Prussia coined the term that dogs were formally given the position “best friend to man.”

Explanation:

For this question, we’re looking for evidence that points us to the origin of the nickname/term “man’s best friend,” not the first instance of interaction between man and dog. So, while evidence of man’s relationship with dogs is given in the incorrect answer choices, only the correct answer gives us any indication about where the term came from.

Example Question #47 : Reading

Passage 1:

School-age children are filled with curiosity and seek to discover new and exciting things every day! So, it is silly to assume that a child would not appreciate the faraway places and times of classics by Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, and Shakespeare. Regardless of the child’s age, if he or she can break down the structure of Shakespeare’s sonnets or the satire of Dickens’s episodics, there is no reason such a child should have to wait until the later part of his or her schooling to enjoy such works. In fact, limiting younger children to writing consisting only of relatable elementary- and middle-school topics such as going to school, overcoming bullying, and growing up only acts to stifle the curiosity that could otherwise be strengthened by the wonder of classic literature. 

Passage 2: 

There is no simpler way to drive children away from reading than to fill their arms and their reading lists with dense, boring novels full of language and topics they find unrelatable and difficult to understand. Allow a child to find his love for reading through books that he can relate to and he will hold onto that appreciation of reading for a lifetime. Force him to know only difficult constructions and dated language when he reads, and you’ll be sure to chase him away from the hobby entirely! By allowing children to read about what they find interesting, or what they can relate to, whether it’s the common challenges faced making friends in school or the wonder of talking animals and superheroes, you build the foundation for a love of reading that will eventually make its way to the classic literature adult readers have come to embrace.

Which of the following is not cited by the authors as something school-aged children find relatable?

 

Possible Answers:

Going on adventures

Going to school

Overcoming bullying

Making friends

Correct answer:

Going on adventures

Explanation:

While all of these answer choices could be things children might enjoy, the author of Passage 1 uses the argument that children should not be limited to only what they might find relatable because they might also enjoy the adventures of faraway places and times. So, while going to school, overcoming bullying, and making friends are all listed as relatable topics for children by at least one of the two authors, going on adventures is not specifically cited as a relatable topic.

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All Common Core: 8th Grade English Language Arts Resources

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