The City School PAF Chapter

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The City School PAF Chapter Comprehensive Worksheet May 2018 ENGLISH Class 7 Candidate Name: Index Number: Section: Branch/Campus: Date: Maximum Marks: 100 Time Allowed: 2 hours INSTRUCTIONS: Write your name, index number, section, branch/campus and date clearly in the space provided. Read and follow the instructions of the given questions. Answer all the questions in the space provided. Select only one answers when made to choose, otherwise no marks will be given. Check your answers before handing your paper in. Marks for each section are shown below. This paper consists of 9 printed pages including the cover page. For Examiner s use only Sections Section A Section B Section C Total Question 1 2 1 1 Max. Marks 30 20 25 25 100 Marks Obtained Percentage Grade INVIGILATED BY MARKED BY MARKS TALLIED BY The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 1 of 9

SECTION A COMPOSITION Q1. The destruction of the world s forests is inevitable as our need for land and food grows. Do you agree? [ /30] Word Limit 200 words The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 2 of 9

The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 3 of 9

Q2. Imagine if you lived in one of the last unreached tribes of the rainforest. Describe your daily routine. [ /20] Word Limit 150 Words The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 4 of 9

SECTION B COMPREHENSION Q.1 Directions: Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow. Refer to the text to check your answers when appropriate. [ /25] Carnivorous Plants Imagine that you're a fly. You're just zipping around the sky, looking for a place to rest, when you see nice pink leaf. That looks like a nice place to land. You think to yourself in your fly head. As you rest your feet on the leaf, you notice something strange. This leaf is hairy. You begin to make your move, but you trigger the plant's reflex. Snap! In one-tenth of a second, you are caught in the Venus flytrap. You will be digested in five to twelve days. Welcome to the world of carnivorous plants! There are over a quarter of a millions plant species. Only 600 or so are carnivorous. We call them this because they attract, trap, and eat bugs. Like other plants, they get energy from the sun. But unlike other plants, they get their nutrients from their prey. Carnivorous plants live in bogs and places where the soil lacks nutrients. Most plants get nutrients from the soil. Carnivorous plants have turned to other sources. The snap of the Venus flytrap is not the only way that plants eat bugs. Pitcher plants trick their prey into landing on them. They offer nectar bribes to the foolish insects that would take them. True to their name, pitcher plants have deep chambers. Their landing surface is slippery. They have inward pointing hairs, making it hard to escape. The fly lands on the pitcher plant to eat, but slips into a pit filled with digestive fluids and is eaten. Then there're sundews. We call them sundews because they sparkle in the sun as if covered in morning dew. Of course, that sparkle is from something much more treacherous. It is a sweet goo called mucilage that bugs can't resist. Sundews create mucilage to attract bugs. As they fly in to eat, bugs become trapped in the very object of their desire. They soon exhaust themselves by trying to escape the mucilage. Or the sundew's tentacles, which respond to prey by curling around them, smother them. Bugs usually die in about 15 minutes. Then the plant dissolves its prey in enzymes and absorbs the nutrients. Have you ever walked into trouble and found that you couldn't get out? So has every insect that has ever wandered into a corkscrew plant. Bugs love to investigate plants for nectar and food. Corkscrew plants have inviting stems. Curved hairs line the inside of these stems. These hairs allow insects to go up the stems, but not back. Going forward leads a chamber filled with digestive fluid, the plant's stomach. Bugs who wander into the corkscrew plant find that they are unable to escape. They must march to their own demise. And then there are the bladderworts. They're about as nice as they sound. They live in water and float near the surface. Their traps are like small bladders hidden beneath the water. Only their flowers are visible from the surface. When bugs swim into the trigger hairs, the plant reacts. A trapdoor in the bladder opens up. The bladder sucks up the prey and the water surrounding it. A tenth of a second later, the bladder shuts again. The plant has trapped the prey. It releases digestive fluids. The prey will be digested within hours. Carnivorous plants might sound tough, but they are difficult to keep at home. They are built to survive in places that other plants cannot. This specialization comes at a cost. They have a hard time adapting to other environments. Their strengths become weaknesses in rich soil. They depend on the harsh yet delicate environments in which they thrive. They are not so hardy after all. Still, there's something to be said about the power of life when one finds a plant that can survive in barren soil. The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 5 of 9

1. Which statement would the author most likely agree with? [ /2] a. There are too many species of carnivorous plants. b. There are too few plant species in the world. c. Only a small number of plants are carnivorous. d. A majority of plants are carnivorous. 2. Which plant traps bugs in its stem and forces them to walk forward? [ /2] a. Corkscrew plants b. Sundews c. Bladderworts d. Pitcher plants 3. Which of the following statements is false? [ /2] a. Carnivorous plants get their energy from eating bugs. b. Carnivorous plants do not get nutrients from the soil. c. Carnivorous plants get their energy from the sun. d. Carnivorous plants get their nutrients from eating bugs. 4. Which event happens last when a sundew eats a meal? [ /2] a. The sundew creates mucilage. b. The sundew's tentacles curl in response to the prey. c. The bug is attracted to the mucilage. d. The sundew releases enzymes. 5. Which best expresses the main idea of the third paragraph? [ /2] a. There are more types of carnivorous plants than the Venus fly trap. b. The pitcher plant tricks bugs into falling into its stomach. c. The Venus flytrap kills its prey in a various ways. d. Some plants attract bugs by offering them nectar. 6. Which best defines the word treacherous as it is used in the fourth paragraph? [ /2] a. Something that provides nutrients. b. Something that is very bright. c. Something that tastes delicious. d. Something that has a hidden danger. 7. Which best describes the overall text structure of the second paragraph? [ /2] a. Chronological order b. Compare and contrast c. Sequential order d. Spatial 8. In what ways are carnivorous plants stronger and more resilient than other plants? In what ways are they weaker? Answer both parts of the question and support your answer with quotes from the text. Explain what your quotes show. [ /3] 9. Compare and contrast two types of plants described in this passage. How are they similar? How are they different? Refer to the text in your answer and explain your arguments completely. [ /4] The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 6 of 9

10. Carnivorous plants have some unique and amazing characteristics. What do these characteristics suggest about life and the world that we live in? In other words, what can carnivorous plants teach us about the world? Make a point and support it with an example from the text. Explain what your support shows. [ /4] The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 7 of 9

Read the following passage: SECTION C LITERATURE At the far end of the hall a silver curtain parted and two young women stepped forward. They were dressed all in white and were beautiful beyond compare. One was grave and quiet, with a look of warm understanding in her eyes, and the other seemed gay and joyful. You must be the Princess of Pure Reason, said Milo, bowing to the first. She answered simply, Yes, and that was just enough. Then you are Sweet Rhyme, he said, with a smile to the other. Her eyes sparkled brightly and she answered with a laugh as friendly as the postman s ring when you know there s a letter for you. We ve come to rescue you both, Milo explained very seriously. And the demons are close behind, said the worried Humbug, still shaky from his ordeal. And we should leave immediately, advised Tock. Oh, they won t dare come up here, said Reason gently; and we ll be down there soon enough. Why not sit for a moment and rest? suggested Rhyme. I m sure you must be tired. Have you been travelling long? Days, sighed the exhausted dog, curling up on a large downy cushion. Weeks, corrected the bug, flopping into a deep comfortable armchair, for it did seem like that to him. It has been a long trip, said Milo, climbing on to a couch where the princesses sat; but we would have been here much sooner if I hadn t made so many mistakes. I m afraid it s all my fault. You must never feel badly about mistakes, explained Reason quietly, as long as you take the trouble to learn from them. For you often learn more by being wrong for the right reasons than you do by being right for the wrong reasons. But there s so much to learn, he said, with a thoughtful frown. Yes that s true, admitted Rhyme; but it s not just learning things that s important. It s what to do with what you learn and learning why you learn things at all that matters. That s just what I mean, explained Milo, as Tock and the exhausted bug drifted quietly off to sleep. Many of the things I m supposed to kno seem useless that I can t see the purpose in learning them at all. You may not see it now, said the Princess of Pure Reason, looking knowingly at Milo s puzzled face, but whatever we do affects everything and everyone else, if even in the tiniest way. Why, when a housefly flaps his wings, a breeze goes round the world; when a speck of dust falls to the ground, the entire planet weighs a little more; and when stamp your foot, the earth moves slightly off its course. Whenever you laugh, gladness spreads like the ripples in a pond and whenever you re sad, no one anywhere can be really happy. And it s much the same thing with knowledge, for whenever you learn something new; the whole world becomes that much richer. Q1. Answer the following questions. [ /25] a. Describe Rhyme and Reason. [ /3] b. How differently did the princesses reply to Milo s greeting? [ /2] c. According to Princess Reason why was it okay to make mistakes? [ /2] The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 8 of 9

d. What puzzled Milo? [ /3] e. Write one simile from the passage. [ /1] f. Quote one connectives from the passage. [ /1] g. Underline the main clause and put the subordinate clause in brackets in the following sentence. [ /2] but we would have been here much sooner if I hadn t made so many mistakes. h. Give the contextual meaning for the following words from the passage. [ /5] i. Gladness ii. Ripples iii. Drifted iv. Ordeal v. Flopping Q2. Write down the character sketch of Terrible Trivium. [ /6] The City School / PAF Chapter/ Comprehensive Worksheet/ May 2018/ English/ Class 7 Page 9 of 9