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On October 24, 1901, the first person to challenge Niagara Falls in a barrel
successfully completed a trip over the great cataract.
Annie Edson Taylor, a 46-year-old widowed schoolteacher living in Bay City,
Michigan, conceived the idea of passing over the Falls in a barrel. Reading of the
5 crowds attracted by the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, she figured that she
could attract a great deal of attention and financial success by this stunt, enabling
her to augment her finances and pay off debts that she had incurred.
Born October 24, 1855, in Auburn, N.Y., she married at 17, and by the time
she was 20 had borne a son. She lost her son a few days after the birth, and later
10 lost her husband.
Realizing that her education was incomplete, she returned to school, finished
her education, and proceeded to secure a variety of teaching positions in such
varied locations as Texas, New Mexico, Tennessee, Washington, D.C., and even
Cuba before moving to Michigan.
15 After deciding to proceed with the stunt, Annie contracted the Bocenchia
Company of West Bay City to build a suitable barrel. This barrel was made of
white Kentucky oak, 56 cm in diameter at its head, 87 cm at the middle, and 38 cm
at the foot, with an overall length of close to 1.5 m. It weighed 73 kg and had a
50- to 100-kg anvil in its bottom.
20 Originally, the trip was scheduled for Sunday, October 20, and several
thousand people gathered at the Falls to witness the event. Taylor, however,
failed to show, and her performance was rescheduled for the following
Wednesday. Again she failed to appear. But the next day, on her 46th birthday,
she left Grass Island above the Falls at about 3:30 P.M. in a small boat, towing her
25 barrel behind her.
About 182 m out into the river, she changed into her abbreviated costume—
she even had the male attendants look the other way while she changed, though
her costume was well below her knees in length.
Climbing into the barrel from its top, she stood on the anvil and was packed
30 tightly in on all sides with pillows and a small mattress. The lid of the barrel was
then screwed on with four 5-cm screws. Her assistants tapped twice on the barrel,
to which she responded that all was in readiness.
They cut the rope, gave the barrel a shove, and watched it head downstream
before rowing back to the Canadian shore. The time was 4:05 P.M., and it took
35 17 minutes for the barrel to reach the lip of Horseshoe Falls, tilt slightly forward,
and disappear into the spray.
The trip thus far was remarkably smooth, though the barrel, riding vertically
most of the way because of the ballast,1 did occasionally go end-over-end upon
1
ballast—a heavy material placed in an object for stability
Petrie, Francis J. “Annie Edson Taylor.” In Roll Out the Barrel: The Story of Niagara’s Daredevils. Erin: The
Boston Mills Press, 1985, pp. 39–40. Adapted and reproduced with permission from April Petrie.
2
hitting submerged rocks. Almost immediately after passing over the 50-m
40 cataract, Mrs. Taylor’s barrel bobbed to the surface in the waters below and was
brought close to the Canadian shore by the eddies and river current. But now it
became stranded on a rocky reef, and it was 4:40 before a makeshift bridge of
planks and poles could be constructed to reach it. Yet more time was needed to
free her, as it was necessary to saw off the top of the barrel.
45 Mrs. Taylor waved feebly to the crowd and is reported to have said to her
rescuers, “Nobody ought ever to do that again.” But she was alive and had
suffered only slight cuts and bruises from her perilous 75-minute trip.
In a small booklet she published herself, recounting the plunge over the Falls,
she described her feelings of absolute terror as the barrel dropped over the
50 precipice. She suffered several anxious moments when her barrel was carried
behind the sheet of falling water and was severely buffeted2 about, but the barrel
was soon propelled into the river, where she was rescued. Taylor was quite
incoherent for several days after her stunt.
She claimed that her barrel had been stolen and, in effect, it had been. Some
55 records of the event state that the barrel was broken up and carried off by eager
souvenir hunters.
Her attempt to cash in on the stunt was far from successful. She toured the
U.S. and Canada with her manager, appearing on vaudeville stages and in concert
halls, but because of her personality, her appearance, and her rather harsh voice,
60 her tour was a failure. A second tour, this time with a replica barrel as a stage
prop, was equally disastrous, and Annie Edson Taylor was reduced almost to
poverty.
Within a year, she was managing a meagre living by posing for pictures beside
her barrel and selling penny postcards of herself in front of souvenir shops on both
65 sides of the border. This means of livelihood lasted almost 20 years until she died
practically penniless in the Niagara County Infirmary, Lockport, N.Y., in 1921.
She was buried in the stunters’ section of Oakwood Cemetery. Over her grave
is a stone reading: “Annie Edson Taylor—first to go over Niagara Falls in a
barrel—October 24, 1901.”
Francis J. Petrie
2
buffeted—hit, beaten, or battered repeatedly
3
I. Read the article “Annie Edson Taylor” and answer questions 1 to 5.
1. According to the article, Annie Taylor decided to go over the Falls in a barrel
because she wanted to
2. The word “incoherent” (line 53) suggests that after her stunt, Annie was most likely
3. Annie Taylor did not achieve her main goal in going over the Falls because
4
II. Read the play below and answer questions 6 to 14.
CHARACTERS:
CLERK
CUSTOMER
ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER
ENTERTAINMENT ROBOT
FIX-IT ROBOT
MEDICAL ROBOT
EXECUTIVE ROBOT
OTHER ROBOTS
SETTING: A store where many kinds of robots are for sale. NOTE: This may be
indicated with chairs and table at front of classroom and signs reading:
CASH REBATES FOR OLD ROBOTS, ASK ABOUT OUR LIBERAL TRADE-IN POLICY
FOR OLD MODELS, ROBOT SHOWROOM, WE SPECIALIZE IN REHABILITATED
5 ROBOTS, LOWEST PRICES FOR NEW AND USED MODELS—MECHANICAL WONDER
WORKERS, etc.
AT CURTAIN RISE: All ROBOTS, except MEDICAL ROBOT and EXECUTIVE ROBOT, are
seated on chairs in a row. CLERK is dusting them.
CLERK: Business certainly has been quiet. In fact, there isn’t any business. I
10 haven’t sold a single robot all week. (CUSTOMER enters.) But wait—here’s
someone now. (to CUSTOMER) Hello. May I help you?
CUSTOMER: Yes. I want to buy a robot housekeeper.
CLERK (going to ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER): Step this way, please. Here’s our latest
and best model. (Pushes buttons on ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER’s back. ROBOT
15 HOUSEKEEPER stands and pantomimes actions as CLERK describes them.) You
can see that this robot does everything—it washes dishes . . . sweeps the floor
. . . hangs pictures . . . dusts furniture . . . (ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER starts to move
faster and faster.) It polishes silverware . . . irons clothes . . . does the
washing . . . (ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER begins to slow up, performing actions in
20 slow motion. Finally, it stops moving. Head and body hang forward with
arms hanging almost to floor.)
CUSTOMER: It moved too fast, and now it’s exhausted. It didn’t last very long,
did it?
CLERK (flustered): Well . . . ah . . . (gets idea) That’s really part of our
25 demonstration. Our robots are very adaptable and easy to repair. The power
pack probably needs recharging. Our Fix-It Robot can take care of that.
“Robots for Sale” by Jane V. Miller is reprinted with the permission of PLAYS, The Drama Magazine for Young
People, © October 2004 and may only be reproduced with the permission of PLAYS, The Drama Magazine for
Young People/Sterling Partners, Inc., PO Box 600160, Newton, MA 02460, pp. 139–143.
5
(Goes to FIX-IT ROBOT, pushes buttons. FIX-IT ROBOT stands and goes to
ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER.) The Fix-It Robot can fix anything and everything: a
lawnmower, a car, a jumbo jet, your food processor. It will have the
30 Housekeeping Robot in perfect condition in no time. (Pushes more buttons on
FIX-IT ROBOT’s back. With large screwdriver, FIX-IT ROBOT begins to poke
and prod ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER, who makes grinding and whirring noises and
begins to move arms and legs.)
CUSTOMER: It’s beginning to move again!
35 CLERK: It is amazing, isn’t it? (FIX-IT ROBOT helps ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER to feet.
ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER’s head is tilted to one side, right arm pointing up, left
arm pointing over right shoulder. It stands bent over and walks about jerkily,
going backward and forward.)
CUSTOMER: That Robot Housekeeper’s still not right. Somehow I don’t think
40 your Fix-It Robot fixed it.
CLERK: No, I just think the Robot Housekeeper isn’t quite broken in. It needs a
couple of weeks to get the bugs out, and then you have to bring it in for a five-
hundred mile check-up and oil change. But remember, after all, no one is
perfect. (CLERK helps ROBOT HOUSEKEEPER to chair where it sits.)
45 CUSTOMER: I really don’t think it’s quite what I’m looking for.
CLERK: Sh-h-h! This robot is very sensitive. We don’t want to hurt its feelings.
CUSTOMER (going to ENTERTAINMENT ROBOT): What does this robot do?
CLERK (enthusiastically): That’s the Super-Deluxe Entertainment Robot, our
latest model—a complete home entertainment center in a new, beautifully
50 designed robot. Let me demonstrate. (Pushes buttons on ENTERTAINMENT
ROBOT’s back) First, some music. This robot can sing a wide selection of
songs. Just name your favourite song. (ENTERTAINMENT ROBOT gets up,
walks to centre.)
CUSTOMER: Can it sing “Over the Rainbow?”
55 CLERK: Of course. That’s easy. (Pushes buttons. ENTERTAINMENT ROBOT
spreads arms wide, sings a few bars of “Over the Rainbow” off-key, in
scratchy voice.)
CUSTOMER (hands over ears): Stop! Stop! That’s terrible.
CLERK: It sounds fine to me—of course, it needs a little tuning. But don’t we all?
60 (pushes button) Now, how about some dancing? What would you like to see?
Tap dance? Ballet? Disco? Or an old-fashioned waltz? You name it—our
Entertainment Robot can do it.
CUSTOMER: How about a waltz? (Waltz music may be played. ENTERTAINMENT
ROBOT grabs CUSTOMER and starts whirling CUSTOMER around stage in a
65 waltz with increasing speed.) Help! Help! Stop this thing! Let me go!
(CLERK runs after them, frantically pushing buttons. Suddenly,
ENTERTAINMENT ROBOT stands rigid, and CUSTOMER falls to floor.)
CLERK: Are you all right?
6
CUSTOMER: I guess so. (gets to feet, rubs his arm) No bones broken. (points to
70 ENTERTAINMENT ROBOT) I’d like to enter that model in a dance marathon. It
would be a sure winner. (rubs leg)
CLERK: Do you feel all right? We have a new experimental robot in the back
room—a Medical Robot. Shall I get it?
CUSTOMER (edging away): Uh . . . no, thanks.
75 CLERK: It knows all the latest wonder cures. It can do physical therapy,
psychoanalysis, acupuncture, remove warts and bunions, perform major
surgery—with or without anesthesia. (MEDICAL ROBOT enters. It wears white
coat and reflector on forehead, has stethoscope hanging around neck, and
carries hammer, saw, chisel, etc.)
80 CUSTOMER (drawing back): No never mind! I feel fine. (limping toward exit)
I never felt better in my life! Goodbye. (exits)
CLERK: I wonder what’s the matter with him? (dejected) Another sale lost. I’m
afraid I’m never going to be a success in this robot business. (EXECUTIVE
ROBOT enters, carrying briefcase.)
85 EXECUTIVE ROBOT (in flat, mechanical voice): I . . . want . . . to . . . talk . . . to
. . . you.
CLERK (looking EXECUTIVE ROBOT over): I’ve never seen a robot like this. It
must be the very newest model. A VIP executive type with a briefcase.
EXECUTIVE ROBOT: I . . . have . . . a . . . message . . . for . . . you . . . from . . .
90 Mr. Thing.
CLERK: Mr. Thing, Mr. Charles C. Thing? The owner of the store? You must be
his own important, personal message-carrying robot. Tell me, what’s the
message?
EXECUTIVE ROBOT: In . . . recognition . . . of . . . your . . . long . . . service . . . to
95 . . . the . . . company. . .
CLERK (eagerly): Yes, yes?
EXECUTIVE ROBOT: Effective . . . at . . . once . . . . You . . . are . . . fired.
(EXECUTIVE ROBOT goes to other ROBOTS, and all shake hands. Then all
ROBOTS stand and start to pantomime their various jobs as CLERK dejectedly
100 walks to door.)
CLERK (turning): By the way, may I use your name and model number for a
reference?
ROBOTS (together): Don’t . . . call . . . us . . . . We’ll . . . call . . . you.
(curtain)
Jane V. Miller
7
II. Read the play “Robots for Sale” and answer questions 6 to 14.
7. In this passage, the word “flustered” (line 24) reflects the clerk’s
A. concern
B. annoyance
C. impatience
D. nervousness
8. The customer probably insists that he is feeling fine (lines 80 to 81) because he
A. irony
B. sarcasm
C. repetition
D. symbolism
10. The statements “Don’t . . . call . . . us . . . . We’ll . . . call . . . you” (line 103)
imply that the
8
11. The phrases that describe the movements and positions of the characters in the play
are called
A. footnotes
B. plot twists
C. editorial notes
D. stage directions
12. The main purpose of this play is to provide the audience with
13. From the beginning of the play to the end of the play, the mood of the sales clerk
changes from
A. arrogance to humility
B. anxiety to confidence
C. thoughtfulness to pessimism
D. hopefulness to discouragement
A. fable
B. satire
C. parody
D. tragedy
9
V. Read the article below and answer questions 28 to 34.
The bear is tasty, I’m told, because it was shot yesterday and because it’s been
fattening up on grain and berries in readiness for hibernation.
Accompanied by a wonderful russet-brown bannock Herb Erickson baked that
morning from his own recipe, and followed by wild strawberries and cream, it’s a
5 completely satisfying meal for a city boy more used to rigatoni1 with artichokes in
a tomato cream sauce followed by tiramisu2 and cappuccino.3
The satisfaction has something to do with the company too, an 83-year-old
trapper, archery champion, poet, trick roper and all-around livewire who’s taught
his cat to jump through his arms on command.
10 Erickson didn’t shoot the bear. He hasn’t hunted or trapped for years. The
meat came from one of the many friends the gregarious4 man with the quick laugh
has made in a lifetime on the same homestead his parents staked out in the wild
lakes country southeast of Lac La Biche.
He hasn’t written any poetry for quite some time either.
15 “It just sort of comes to me. It has to be triggered by something. I can’t just
sit down and write a poem,” he says with a shrug and a smile that lights up his
blue eyes.
But he’ll recite all 11 of them to anyone who cares to listen. They’re about
familiar things in his life—geese, chickadees, forest fires, flowers, his old dog
20 Blackie and his mother. The poem he wrote for her 90th birthday in 1974 reads
in part:
Some years were happy, some sad, some good, and some bad. But she
endured and weathered them all. For you see her here today in this hall. She is
sitting so gracious and serene in her chair. You wouldn’t believe she is ninety.
25 He still shoots arrows though, every day. When it gets too cold to use his
outside targets, the man who was Canadian archery champion every year from
1949 to 1957 sits in one corner of his house and fires shaft after shaft the four
metres to a target in the other corner made from cardboard and old clothes.
He credits the weight training that pulling a bowstring provides with keeping
30 him fit and healthy. And he’s not shy about stripping off his shirt and flexing his
impressive muscles for someone he’s only known a few minutes.
He shoots . . . by instinct and very fast. You don’t really aim, you have a feel
1
rigatoni—large, ribbed macaroni
2
tiramisu—an Italian dessert
3
cappuccino—espresso coffee topped with steamed milk
4
gregarious—sociable, outgoing
Finlayson, Dave. “An Almost Perfect Life.” In the Edmonton Journal, October 14, 1999, sec. G, p. 1. Material
reprinted with the express permission of: “Edmonton Journal Group Inc.”, a CanWest Partnership.
15
for where it’s supposed to go. The arrow’s gone within three seconds and three
seconds later another one is streaking to its target.
35 He learned the technique as the seventh of 10 children of a couple who moved
up here from the U.S. in 1914, by train to the end of the line at Vegreville and
then by wagon to a quarter section near Pinehurst Lake.
A Cree friend gave him his first bow made from dried willow when he was
eight and it’s been his passion ever since. In his first tournament he astounded
40 Alberta’s best archers by beating them with a simple wooden bow made from
yew;5 no glove, sight or armguard; and homemade wooden arrows. He even
took a bow overseas with him during the Second World War, but had to leave
it in England. . . . He was wounded in the hip and spent three days as a
prisoner of the Germans before they were overrun by the Allies and he was
45 rescued.
That bow is one of his proudest possessions and it’s one of the first things he
shows the visitor to a home that’s perfect for a man of the outdoors who never
married.
There’s a gas stove and sink on one wall, a fridge by the door and a single
50 bunk against another wall. In the middle is an old wooden table that’s both a
place to eat and a workplace for his arrow and bowstring making. He has a
furnace but prefers the wood-burning stove. No TV or radio and the only sound
apart from his storytelling is the hourly twittering from the bird clock that hangs
on the wall between old photographs, wildlife scenes from calendars going back
55 as far as the ’30s, and an Elizabeth Taylor Star Weekly cover from 1949.
One of the few concessions to modernity in his life is the new Ford Explorer
outside.
“I found myself shovelling snow last winter and I don’t want to do that at my
age so I got something to get me through it.”
60 The gleaming sport utility vehicle does look a bit odd, because this is a place
of memories.
Right next to the 48-year-old house he lives in now is the old homestead his
blacksmith father built. The tamarack logs are as solid now as when they were
felled.
65 A few yards away is his garden where the rhubarb plant his parents brought
with them from the U.S. in 1914 still flourishes.
“If they had it 15 years before they came, and that’s entirely possible, then this
plant is 100 years old.”
There too is the trappers’ cabin he hauled out to nearby Lake Horne every fall,
70 and where he spent the long winters skinning squirrels, beaver, muskrats and
anything else that could generate a few dollars.
He loved the freedom and exhilaration he felt in the bush and apart from two
summers working on the Mackenzie River boats in the ’30s, it was his only
livelihood from the age of 16.
5
yew—a type of evergreen tree
16
75 He figures he’s trapped 30,000 squirrels (he got 1,941 one year alone) and
walked around the world in snowshoes.
Many days, he walked 24 kilometres through the heavy snow.
He’s had his share of encounters with bears—he scared off a grizzly that came
to his front door—but never felt his life was in danger.
80 He was an expert marksman and always had a rifle handy. He had that
hand/eye/distance gift that allowed him to excel at archery, roping, shooting and
throwing axes.
He can hit a small target with an axe from 4, 8 and 11 metres (the optimum
distances for the number of rotations of the axe) and the first time he threw two
85 axes at once, both of them hit the target.
To amuse visitors he’ll throw a dishcloth over his shoulder without looking
and make it land perfectly on the rail above the sink on the other side of the room.
He once lassoed a great horned owl, and he’ll lasso your outstretched arm
from across the room and then throw a series of half hitches on it.
90 He can’t do his party piece rope trick any more, where he jumps inside a loop
and plays the harmonica with his free hand.
He injured his knee doing it at a picnic and had to have surgery.
He rolls up his pantleg and shows the 30-centimetre scar where metal pins
were inserted.
95 “See. Don’t I heal good? But I’ll tell you, a year from now, I don’t think I’ll
be able to walk.”
His fingers are still nimble enough that he’ll amaze you with close-up card
manipulation, and there’s a trick he does with two hats and four balls that’ll have
you swearing he makes the balls pass through the wooden tabletop.
100 He doesn’t compete in archery any more but still gets together regularly with
fellow archers.
He recently received a lifetime achievement award at the provincial
championships in Taber.
“I got along good with people and made a lot of friends through archery. It’s a
105 wonderful sport.”
His life, he says, has been wonderful all round.
“It’s been about as close to perfect as you could get.”
Not that it’s anywhere near over.
With his excellent health, and his mother living to 100, chances are there’ll be
110 many more lunches of roast bear and bannock.
Dave Finlayson
17
V. Read the article “An Almost Perfect Life” and answer questions 28 to 34.
A. innovative manner
B. types of occupations
C. energetic personality
D. variety of accomplishments
30. Erickson’s victory at his first archery tournament was remarkable because he
A. shot by instinct
B. was the youngest participant
C. had been injured during the war
D. competed with limited equipment
31. In the article, contrast between old and new is best shown by the
32. Which of the following activities does Herb Erickson continue to do?
A. Trapping
B. Writing poetry
C. Performing tricks
D. Competing in archery
18
33. Erickson would most likely describe his life on the homestead as
A. lonely
B. amusing
C. satisfying
D. dangerous
34. In this article, the author tells the reader about Erickson’s life mainly through
the use of
A. opinion
B. dialogue
C. persuasion
D. description
19
VII. Read the essay below and answer questions 38 to 42.
IN PRAISE OF BIKES
Arthur Black
1
wag—a humorous person
2
popinjay—a vain, talkative person
Black, Arthur. “In Praise of Bikes.” In Glide Path. Destinations. By Sam Robinson, Audrey Elchuk, and Pat
Gray. Scarborough: Prentice-Hall Canada Inc., 1991, pp. 153–154. Adapted and reproduced with permission from
Arthur Black.
22
VII. Read the essay “In Praise of Bikes” and answer questions 38 to 42.
38. The author included the promoter’s talk in the introduction in order to encourage
readers to
39. Capital letters are probably used in the first paragraph to convey the
A. accept
B. violate
C. change
D. improve
A. humorous
B. thoughtful
C. whimsical
D. complimentary
23
VIII. Read the excerpt from a short story below and answer questions 43 to 47.
Day had broken cold and gray, exceedingly cold and gray, when the man turned
aside from the main Yukon trail and climbed the high earth-bank, where a dim and
little-travelled trail led eastward through the fat spruce timberland. It was a steep
bank, and he paused for breath at the top, excusing the act to himself by looking at
5 his watch. It was nine o’clock. There was no sun nor hint of sun, though there was
not a cloud in the sky. It was a clear day, and yet there seemed an intangible pall
over the face of things, a subtle gloom that made the day dark, and that was due to
the absence of sun. This fact did not worry the man. He was used to the lack of
sun. It had been days since he had seen the sun, and he knew that a few more days
10 must pass before that cheerful orb, due south, would just peep above the sky-line
and dip immediately from view.
The man flung a look back along the way he had come. The Yukon lay a mile
wide and hidden under three feet of ice. On top of this ice were as many feet of
snow. It was all pure white, rolling in gentle, undulations where the ice-jams of the
15 freeze-up had formed. North and south, as far as his eye could see, it was unbroken
white, save for a dark hair-line that curved and twisted from around the spruce-
covered island to the south, and that curved and twisted away into the north, where
it disappeared behind another spruce-covered island. This dark hair-line was the
trail — the main trail — that led south five hundred miles to the Chilcoot Pass,
20 Dyea, and salt water; and that led north seventy miles to Dawson, and still on to the
north a thousand miles to Nulato, and finally to St. Michael on Bering Sea, a
thousand miles and half a thousand more.
But all this — the mysterious, far-reaching hair-line trail, the absence of sun
from the sky, the tremendous cold, and the strangeness and weirdness of it all —
25 made no impression on the man. It was not because he was long used to it. He was
a newcomer in the land, a chechaquo, and this was his first winter. The trouble
with him was that he was without imagination. He was quick and alert in the things
of life, but only in the things, and not in the significances. Fifty degrees below zero
meant eighty-odd degrees of frost. Such fact impressed him as being cold and
30 uncomfortable, and that was all. It did not lead him to meditate upon his frailty as a
creature of temperature, and upon man’s frailty in general, able only to live within
certain narrow limits of heat and cold; and from there on it did not lead him to the
conjectural field of immortality and man’s place in the universe. Fifty degrees
below zero stood for a bite of frost that hurt and that must be guarded against by the
35 use of mittens, ear-flaps, warm moccasins, and thick socks. Fifty degrees below
zero was to him just precisely fifty degrees below zero. That there should be
anything more to it than that was a thought that never entered his head.
London, Jack. “To Build a Fire.” In Lost Face. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1910, pp. 63–66. Public
domain.
24
As he turned to go on, he spat speculatively. There was a sharp, explosive
crackle that startled him. He spat again. And again, in the air, before it could fall to
40 the snow, the spittle crackled. He knew that at fifty below spittle crackled on the
snow, but this spittle had crackled in the air. Undoubtedly it was colder than fifty
below — how much colder he did not know. But the temperature did not matter.
He was bound for the old claim on the left fork of Henderson Creek, where the boys
were already. They had come over across the divide from the Indian Creek country,
45 while he had come the roundabout way to take a look at the possibilities of getting
out logs in the spring from the islands in the Yukon. He would be in to camp by
six o’clock; . . . the boys would be there, a fire would be going, and a hot supper
would be ready.
Jack London
25
VIII. Read the excerpt from the short story “To Build a Fire” and answer
questions 43 to 47.
44. Which of the following words is closest in meaning to the word “undulations”
(line 14)?
A. Channels
B. Hollows
C. Curves
D. Waves
45. The sentence “He was quick and alert in the things of life, but only in the things,
and not in the significances” (lines 27 to 28) suggests the man’s
46. In this excerpt, the writing technique that the author uses most often is the
development of
A. point of view
B. sensory details
C. internal conflicts
D. character motivation
47. The man in the excerpt continued on his journey most likely because he
26
IX. Read the poem below and answer questions 48 to 51.
THE PAPER-BOY
Walter Bauer
Translated by Henry Beissel
Bauer, Walter. “The Paper-Boy.” Translated by Henry Beissel. In Working Together: Anthology. MultiSource.
Edited by Margaret Iveson and Samuel Robinson. Scarborough: Prentice-Hall Canada Inc., 1993, p. 99.
27
IX. Read the poem “The Paper-Boy” and answer questions 48 to 51.
A. relief
B. solitude
C. acceptance
D. resignation
A. deep affection
B. a sense of pride
C. total concentration
D. a sense of obligation
A. happiness
B. obedience
C. responsibility
D. companionship
28
X. Examine the cartoon below and answer questions 52 to 55.
1 2 3 4
Bill Watterson
CALVIN AND HOBBES © 1986 Watterson. Dist. By UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE. Reprinted with
permission. All rights reserved.
29
X. Examine the cartoon “Calvin and Hobbes” and answer questions 52 to 55.
A. cruel intent
B. clever humour
C. morbid curiosity
D. suppressed anger
53. In context, the phrase “SLEEPY WATERFRONT COMMUNITY” (frame 2) portrays the
people who live there as
A. cooperative
B. prosperous
C. idealistic
D. innocent
54. The sentence “A MUFFLED SCREAM LINGERS IN THE SALTY AIR!” (frame 3)
establishes
A. irony
B. mood
C. setting
D. character
A. impulsive
B. distracting
C. destructive
D. irresponsible
30
I. Read the following poem and answer questions 1 to 6.
I Am…
Collette Lascombe
Robinson, Sam, ed. “I Am... .” In Fast Forward. Destinations. Scarborough: Prentice‑Hall Canada, 1990.
Reproduced with permission from Pearson Education Canada.
1. The quotation “So there it was Friday afternoon again” (line 1) is used to establish
A. suspense
B. the setting
C. point of view
D. the main idea
A. a joke
B. an insult
C. a question
D. a compliment
2
Released Items
9
Knowledge
GRADE
and Employability
2010 English Language Arts
Achievement Test Part B: Reading
This document contains released items from the 2010 Grade 9 Knowledge and Employability
English Language Arts Achievement Test, Part B: Reading.
A test blueprint and an answer key that includes the difficulty, reporting category, curricular
content area, and item description for each test item are also included. These materials along
with the Program of Studies and subject bulletin, provide information that can be used to inform
instructional practice.
Copyright 2010, the Crown in Right of Alberta, as represented by the Minister of Education, Alberta
Education, Learner Assessment, 44 Capital Boulevard, 10044 108 Street NW, Edmonton, Alberta
T5J 5E6, and its licensors. All rights reserved.
Special permission is granted to Alberta educators only to reproduce, for educational purposes and on
a non‑profit basis, parts of this document that do not contain excerpted material.
Excerpted material in this document shall not be reproduced without the written permission of the original
publisher (see credits, where applicable).
Part B: Reading—2010 Achievement Test Readings and Questions
The readings and questions presented in this document are from the secured 2010 Grade 9
Knowledge and Employability English Language Arts Achievement Test, Part B: Reading.
These readings and items are released by Alberta Education.
I Am…
Collette Lascombe
Robinson, Sam, ed. “I Am... .” In Fast Forward. Destinations. Scarborough: Prentice‑Hall Canada, 1990.
Reproduced with permission from Pearson Education Canada.
1. The quotation “So there it was Friday afternoon again” (line 1) is used to establish
A. suspense
B. the setting
C. point of view
D. the main idea
A. a joke
B. an insult
C. a question
D. a compliment
2
3. The words “Yep” (line 5) and “ ‘cause” (line 6) are examples of
A. irony
B. slang
C. conflict
D. sarcasm
4. Which of the following words would best replace the dash (–) at the end of line 9?
A. Because
B. Although
C. Otherwise
D. Furthermore
5. The quotation “I think I’m crossing girls off my / Top ten list” (lines 13 and 14) is
most likely used to create
A. conflict
B. humour
C. imagery
D. symbolism
3
II. Examine the cartoon below and answer questions 7 to 10.
Dik Browne
4
7. The word “me” (frame 2) is written in bold to suggest that Hagar is feeling
A. embarrassed
B. determined
C. respectful
D. bored
A. metaphor
B. comparison
C. contradiction
D. exaggeration
A. relaxing
B. difficult
C. ridiculous
D. entertaining
A. timid
B. worried
C. realistic
D. dramatic
5
III. Read the excerpt from a novel below and answer questions 11 to 15.
“Attention! Attention! Nordair flight number three to Baffin Island is now ready
for boarding.…”
“Hurry! We’re late!” his father called to him.
Matthew shivered inwardly with excitement at the thought of flying two
5 thousand miles north into the Canadian Arctic. He remembered again a coloured
photograph he had once seen of a polar bear crouching over its kill. In his mind’s
eye he saw the terrifying image of the white bear. It was a frightening vision that
had troubled Matthew since the day his father said they would go together to the
Arctic. Matthew jumped when he heard his father exclaim.
10 “Can’t be that much!” Mr. Morgan looked and could scarcely believe the
weight of their equipment on the scales.
“Put your two bags on gently,” said his father. “Our overweight is going to cost
a fortune.”
Matthew eyed the three big aluminum trunks and waited as the agent, who
15 spoke more French than English, hurriedly tallied up the cost. There was his
father’s leather suitcase and fat duffle bag and the long metal case that held the
transom level, claim stakes and their favourite fishing rods.
“Five hundred and seven pounds,” the agent said. “That’s…let me see…”
He punched the numbers on the square black computer. “Eight hundred and…
20 thirty-one dollars…and seventy-five cents.”
“…A poor geologist never gets off light.” His father groaned. He pulled
his wallet out and paid with hundred dollar bills, rubbing each one to see that two
were not stuck together. “It’s a lucky thing we’re going to a place where we won’t
spend much money, because—”
25 “I know,” said Matthew. “Because we don’t have much money.”
“Right!” said his father. “You’ll see, a helicopter eats money like an elephant
eats grass.”
Together they passed through security and hurried along the endless corridor
until they came to gate sixteen.
James Houston
Houston, James. Frozen Fire: A Tale of Courage. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1977. Adapted and
reproduced with permission from the Estate of James Houston.
6
11. The information in lines 1 to 3 is used by the author to create a sense of
A. hope
B. relief
C. urgency
D. disappointment
12. The phrase “Matthew jumped” (line 9) is used to show that Matthew
A. estimated
B. reviewed
C. reported
D. added
14. The statement “a helicopter eats money like an elephant eats grass” (lines 26 to 27)
emphasizes the father’s belief that
15. The phrase “hurried along the endless corridor” (line 28) is used to show that
Matthew and his father were feeling
A. bored
B. angry
C. anxious
D. frightened
7
IV. Read the following information and answer questions 16 to 18.
8
16. In order to meet the educational requirements of a carpenter, a job applicant must
17. Which of the following criteria is most important for a new carpenter to meet?
A. Owning a vehicle
B. Having a set of tools
C. Completing university
D. Being able to read blueprints
18. Which of the following groups of people would be most interested in this job?
9
Knowledge and Employability English Language Arts
Part B: Reading—2010 Test Blueprint and Item Descriptions
The following table provides information on 18 of the test items that appeared on the 2010 Grade 9
Knowledge and Employability English Language Arts Achievement Test, Part B: Reading.
10
The table below provides information about each question: the keyed response, the difficulty of
the item (the percentage of students who answered the question correctly), the reporting category,
the language function, and the item description.
11
Diff. Reporting Language
Question Key Item Description
% Category Function
Infer the meaning of a phrase to identify
Ideas and Narrative/
15 C 78.1 characters feelings in an excerpt from a
Details Poetic
novel.
Locate key details from a job
Ideas and
16 C 70.0 Informational description to identify educational
Details
requirements.
Integrate information from a job
Synthesizing
17 D 64.0 Informational description to draw a conclusion about
Meaning
essential employment criteria.
Integrate information from a job
Synthesizing description to make a generalization
18 C 72.3 Informational
Meaning about the interest of applicants in a
particular job.
12