Sunday, December 28, 2014

TET Exam 2015 Teachers Eligibility Test - CTET - CENTRAL TEACHER ELIGIBILITY TEST


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TET Exam 2014-2015 Teachers Eligibility Test Paper I (Class I to V) Teacher, Paper II (Class V to VIII) Lower and Upper Primary Teacher Recruitment

A most essential exam as per NCTE Guidelines and RTE Act.

Without passing TET exam , you are not able to become Teacher for class 1 to 8

TET EXAM GUIDELINES

TET Exam 2015
TET Exam 2014

    TET Application

    TET Exam Date
    TET Exam Syllabus

    TET Eligibility
    TET Sample Papers

    TET Answer Keys

    TET Result

    TET Admit Card / Hall Ticket

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 Paper I Book For all TET

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 Andhra Pradesh TET APTET
 AP TRT Exam
  •     Application Form
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  •     Syllabus
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 Assam Secondary TET

  •     Application Form
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  •     Syllabus
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******************
 Assam TET

  •     Application Form
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  •     Syllabus
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******************
 Bihar TET BETET.

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 Central TET (CTET)

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 Chandigarh TET

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*****************
 Chattisgarh TET  (CGTET)
 http://cgtet.blogspot.com/

  •     Application Form
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 Delhi TET (DTET)

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 Goa (GO TET)

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 Gujarat TET (GTET)

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 Haryana TET (HTET)

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 Jammu Kashmir (JK TET)

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 Karnataka TET EXAM (KTET)

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Kerala TET (K-TET)

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 Lakshadweep TET

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 Madhya Pradesh TET (MPTET)

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 Maharashtra TET (MH TET)


MAHATET

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Manipur TET

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 Meghalaya TET

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Nagaland TET

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 Orissa TET

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 Punjab TET

Punjab State Teacher Eligibility Test - PSTET

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Rajasthan TET

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 Sikkim TET

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 Tamil Nadu TET (TNTET)

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Tripura TET

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 Uttar Pradesh TET (UPTET)
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UPTET  UPTET  Application Form
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 Uttarakhand TET (UTET)

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West Bengal TET (WBTET)

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**********************

SYLLABUS OF TET EXAM

 TET SOLVED PAPERS

CTET SOLVED PAPERS


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State TET Links


StateWebsite
Assam http://ssaassam.gov.in/rtact.htm
Andhra Pradesh http://aptet.cgg.gov.in/
Bihar http://www.bihartet.co.in/#betet::Registration
Chandigarh  http://www.chdeducation.gov.in/whatisnew.asp
Chattisgarh  http://cg.nic.in/eduportal/login.aspx
Goa  http://www.education.goa.gov.in/
Gujarat  http://www.gujaratset.ac.in/
Haryana  http://htet.nic.in/htetapp/Welcome.aspx
Himachal Pradesh  http://admis.hp.nic.in/himachal
Jammu & Kashmir  http://jkhighereducation.nic.in/index.html
Jharkand  http://jac.nic.in/
Kerela  http://www.kerala-tet.com/
Lakshwadeep  http://lakshadweep.nic.in/welcome.htm
Madhya Pradesh  http://www.educationportal.mp.gov.in/
Maharashtra  http://mahatet.in/TETAPP/PublicHome.aspx
Manipur  http://bsem.nic.in/
Mizoram  http://mbse.edu.in/
Odisha  http://bseodisha.nic.in/
Punjab  http://www.tetpunjab.com/
Rajasthan  http://rtetbser.org/
Tamil Nadu  http://trb.tn.nic.in/
Uttar Pradesh  http://upbasiceduboard.gov.in/
Uttrakhand  http://www.ubse.in/
West Bengal  http://wbtet.nic.in/
Central  Teacher Eligibility Test   http://ctet.nic.in/ctetapp/welcome.aspx

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Latest Updated Exam / Guess / Model Solved Papers - Answer Keys - http://syllabus123.blogspot.com/

CTET-TET PART IV ENGLISH LANGUAGE- I Previous Years solved Question Papers

CENTRAL TECHER ELIGIBILITY TEST PREVIOUS YEAR SOLVED PAPERS

CTET  / टीईटी / TET - Teacher Eligibility Test Updates / Teacher Recruitment  /SARKARI NAUKRI NEWS  / SARKARI NAUKRI News

CTET, CTET SOLVED PAPERS,

CTET

Directions: Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow (Q. No. 1 to 9) by selecting the most appropriate option.

Surviving a Snakebite

1 Annually, there are a million cases of snakebite in India and of these, close to 50,000 succumb to the bites.

2 When you look around the countryside, where most bites occur, and notice people's habits and lifestyles, these figures aren't surprising. People walk barefoot without a torch at night when they are most likely to step on a foraging venomous snake.

3 We encourage rodents by disposing waste food out in the open, or by storing foodgrains in the house. Attracted by the smell of rats, snakes enter houses and when one crawls over someone asleep on the floor and the person twitches or rolls over, it may bite in defence.

4 Once bitten, we don't rush to the hospital. Instead, we seek out the nearest conman, tie tourniquets, eat vile tasting herbal chutneys, apply poultices or spurious stones, cut/slice/suck the bitten spot, and other ghastly time-consuming deadly "remedies".

5 As Rom cattily remarks : "If the snake hasn't injected enough venom, even popping an aspirin can save your life." That's the key - snakes inject venom voluntarily and we have no way of knowing if it has injected venom, and if it is a lethal dose. The only first aid is to immobilise the bitten limb like you would a fracture, and get to a hospital for anti-venom serum without wasting time.

1. Of the people who are. bitten by snakes in India, the fatality rate is

(1) 5%

(2) 25%

(3) 50%

(4) 100%
Ans:

2. According to the author, people living in which parts are more prone to snake bites?

(1) Crowded cities

(2) The open

(3) Villages

(4) Forests
Ans: (3)

3. Storing foodgrains in the house is one of the causes for snake bites because

(1) foodgrains attract rats which in turn attract snakes

(2) snakes enter houses in search of stored foodgrains

(3) the smell of foodgrains brings both snakes and other animals into the house

(4) stored foodgrains create convenient hiding places for snakes within houses
Ans: (1)

4. '... it may bite in defence' (para-3). This observation implies that

(1) a snake is very good at defending itself

(2) a snake may bite a human being in order to defend its prey

(3) human beings are defenceless against snakes

(4) a snake bites a human only when it is threatened
Ans: (4)

5. What, according to the author, is the reason for the high fatality rate due to snakebites in India?

(1) Shortage of medical facilities

(2) Lack of scientific knowledge about snakebites

(3) Shortage of anti-venom serum

(4) Shortage of doctors
Ans: (2)

6. In the instance of a snakebite, what should we do immediately?

(1) Tie torniquets

(2) Eat herbal chutneys

(3) Immobilise the bitten part and get anti-venom serum

(4) Cut-slice-suck the bitten spot
Ans: (3)

7. Pick out a word from the passage which means 'to go around in search of food'. (Para 2)

(1) Foraging

(2) Countryside

(3) Venomous

(4) barefoot
Ans: (1)

8. "If the snake hasn't injected enough venom, even popping an aspirin can save your life." This sentence can be rewritten without changing the meaning as

(1) When a snake has not injected enough venom, life can be saved even by swallowing an aspirin.

(2) Life can be saved even by swallowing an aspirin, even though the snake hasn't injected enough venom.

(3) Even popping an aspirin can save your life, in spite of a snake not having injected enough venom.

(4) As long as you are popping an aspirin to save your life, the snake will not inject enough venom.
Ans: (1)

9. Pick out a word from the passage, that power to cause death'. means 'having the (Para 5)

(1) immobilise

(2) voluntarily

(3) lethal

(4) serum
Ans: (3)

Directions: Read the poem given below and answer the questions that follow (Q. No. 10 -105) by selecting the most appropriate option.
Common Cold

1 Go hang yourself, you old M.D.! You shall not sneer at me. Pick up your hat and stethoscope, Go wash your mouth with laundry soap; I contemplate a joy exquisite I'm not paying you for your visit. I did not call you to be told My malady is a common cold.

2 By pounding brow and swollen lip; By fever's hot and scaly grip; By those two red redundant eyes That weep like woeful April skies; By racking snuffle, snort, and sniff; By handkerchief after handkerchief; This cold you wave away as naught Is the damnedest cold man ever caught !

3 Bacilli swarm within my portals Such as were ne'er conceived by mortals, But bred by scientists wise and hoary In some Olympic laboratory; Bacteria as large as mice, With feet of fire and heads of ice
Who never interrupt for slumber Their stamping elephantine rumba.

10. What is the emotion that the poet displays in the first stanza ?

(1) Anger

(2) Joy

(3) Jealousy

(4) Sympathy
Ans: (3)
11. Why and at whom does the poet show his emotion?

(1) At an old man because he has sneered at the poet

(2) At a doctor for an incorrect diagnosis of his medical condition

(3) At a friend who is happy at the poet's plight

(4) At a doctor who has said the poet merely has a cold
Ans: (4)

12. The poet describes his eyes as 'two red redundant eyes' because .

(1) he cannot see properly due to the cold

(2) they show how furious the poet is

(3) they have been affected by an eye-disease

(4) in his medical condition the poet is imagining things
Ans: (1)

13. 'Bacteria as large as mice' is an instance of a/ an

(1) simile and a hyperbole

(2) metaphor

(3) personification

(4) alliteration
Ans:

14. 'Who never interrupt for slumber Their stamping elephantine rumba.' The meaning of these lines is that

(1) the bacteria are continuously stamping their elephant-like feet

(2) the cold-causing germs are causing much discomfort and pain to the poet without any break

(3) the bacilli are so active that they refuse to go to sleep

(4) the poet is not able to concentrate on his work due to the raging cold
Ans: (2)

15. The general tone of the poem can be described as

(1) satirical and harsh

(2) ironical and mocking

(3) whimsical and humorous

(4) sad and tragic
Ans: (1)

Directions: Answer the following questions by selecting the most appropriate option.

16. The Constructivist Approach to learning means

(1) involving the students in a variety of activities to encourage them to learn new words and structures by accommodating them with those that they have already learnt through a process of discovery

(2) teaching rules of grammar and consolidating through rigorous practice

(3) helping learners acquire new vocabulary by studying literature intensively

(4) teaching new words and structures using a variety of audio-visual aids followed by practice through drill
Ans: (1)

17. What is the skill among the ones given below that cannot be tested in a formal written examination?

(1) Reading for information

(2) Meaning of words and phrases

(3) Extensive reading for pleasure

(4) Analysing texts
Ans: (3)

18. Which of the following is suitable for making students responsible for their own learning?

(1) Discouraging students from making decisions about how they learn best

(2) Using technology to chat and network

(3) Encouraging students to ask more and more questions

(4) Giving a lot of homework, project work and assignments to improve language skills of students
Ans: (3)

19. Ania, while teaching paragraph construction, should draw attention to

(1) a large variety of ideas

(2) originality of ideas

(3) topic sentence, supporting details and connectors

(4) a range of vocabulary
Ans: (3)

20. Communicative Language Teaching is concerned with

(1) teaching of vocabulary and grammar through rules of spelling and language

(2) teaching language to learners for written tests

(3) interpreting grammar rules to suit the audience

(4) enhancing receptive and productive skills such as speaking, listening, reading and writing
Ans: (4)

21. Formative Assessment is assessment

(1) of learning

(2) at learning

(3) in learning

(4) for learning
Ans: (1)

22. The term 'Comprehensive' in Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation means

(1) scholastic development

(2) co-scholastic development

(3) academic skills

(4) scholastic and co-scholastic development
Ans:

23. A teacher designs a test to find out the cause of the poor grades of her learners through alan

(1) Diagnostic Test

(2) Proficiency Test

(3) Achievement Test

(4) Aptitude Test
Ans: (1)

24. An inclusive class is that in which

(1) differently abled learners study with normal students

(2) students from different nationalities study together

(3) students from different religions study together

(4) both boys and girls study together
Ans: (1)

25. 'Concrete Operational Stage' refers to those learners who are

(1) adolescents

(2) at middle level

(3) toddlers

(4) adults
Ans: (2)

26. When learners are engaged in a pair activity, taking on roles of a doctor and a patient, the activity is called

(1) Real Activity

(2) Declamation

(3) Simulation

(4) Exchanging notes
Ans: (3)

27. Essays or long writing tasks especially on a discursive issue should

(1) help students develop their literary skills

(2) help students with grammar

(3) help them to improve their handwriting

(4) help them discuss the different points of view and justify them with illustrative points
Ans: (4)

28. A teacher, Amrita, uses various tasks such as creating charts, graphs, drawing, gathering information and presenting them through pair or group work. This differentiated instruction

(1) helps learners with multiple intelligences to perform well and learn better

(2) is a way of demonstrating her own knowledge

(3) only helps the bright learners

(4) is the best way to prepare students for an assessment
Ans:

29. Using a word bank and brainstorming helps to build

(1) Vocabulary

(2) Ideas

(3) Writing skills

(4) Reading comprehension
Ans: (1)

30. Gender stereotypes and bias among learners can be discouraged by

(1) enabling all learners to cook and sew irrespective of gender

(2) using textbooks which do perpetuate such beliefs

(3) creating an open and encouraging atmosphere in a mixed class

(4) pressuring girls to learn cooking
Ans: (1)

CTET-TET PART IV ENGLISH LANGUAGE- I Previous Years solved Question Papers

Latest Updated Exam / Guess / Model Solved Papers - Answer Keys - http://syllabus123.blogspot.com/

CTET-TET PART IV ENGLISH LANGUAGE- I Previous Years solved Question Papers

CENTRAL TECHER ELIGIBILITY TEST PREVIOUS YEAR SOLVED PAPERS

CTET  / टीईटी / TET - Teacher Eligibility Test Updates / Teacher Recruitment  /SARKARI NAUKRI NEWS  / SARKARI NAUKRI News

CTET, CTET SOLVED PAPERS,

CTET

Directions: Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow (Q. No. 1 to 9) by selecting the most appropriate option.

Surviving a Snakebite

1 Annually, there are a million cases of snakebite in India and of these, close to 50,000 succumb to the bites.

2 When you look around the countryside, where most bites occur, and notice people's habits and lifestyles, these figures aren't surprising. People walk barefoot without a torch at night when they are most likely to step on a foraging venomous snake.

3 We encourage rodents by disposing waste food out in the open, or by storing foodgrains in the house. Attracted by the smell of rats, snakes enter houses and when one crawls over someone asleep on the floor and the person twitches or rolls over, it may bite in defence.

4 Once bitten, we don't rush to the hospital. Instead, we seek out the nearest conman, tie tourniquets, eat vile tasting herbal chutneys, apply poultices or spurious stones, cut/slice/suck the bitten spot, and other ghastly time-consuming deadly "remedies".

5 As Rom cattily remarks : "If the snake hasn't injected enough venom, even popping an aspirin can save your life." That's the key - snakes inject venom voluntarily and we have no way of knowing if it has injected venom, and if it is a lethal dose. The only first aid is to immobilise the bitten limb like you would a fracture, and get to a hospital for anti-venom serum without wasting time.

1. Of the people who are. bitten by snakes in India, the fatality rate is

(1) 5%

(2) 25%

(3) 50%

(4) 100%
Ans:

2. According to the author, people living in which parts are more prone to snake bites?

(1) Crowded cities

(2) The open

(3) Villages

(4) Forests
Ans: (3)

3. Storing foodgrains in the house is one of the causes for snake bites because

(1) foodgrains attract rats which in turn attract snakes

(2) snakes enter houses in search of stored foodgrains

(3) the smell of foodgrains brings both snakes and other animals into the house

(4) stored foodgrains create convenient hiding places for snakes within houses
Ans: (1)

4. '... it may bite in defence' (para-3). This observation implies that

(1) a snake is very good at defending itself

(2) a snake may bite a human being in order to defend its prey

(3) human beings are defenceless against snakes

(4) a snake bites a human only when it is threatened
Ans: (4)

5. What, according to the author, is the reason for the high fatality rate due to snakebites in India?

(1) Shortage of medical facilities

(2) Lack of scientific knowledge about snakebites

(3) Shortage of anti-venom serum

(4) Shortage of doctors
Ans: (2)

6. In the instance of a snakebite, what should we do immediately?

(1) Tie torniquets

(2) Eat herbal chutneys

(3) Immobilise the bitten part and get anti-venom serum

(4) Cut-slice-suck the bitten spot
Ans: (3)

7. Pick out a word from the passage which means 'to go around in search of food'. (Para 2)

(1) Foraging

(2) Countryside

(3) Venomous

(4) barefoot
Ans: (1)

8. "If the snake hasn't injected enough venom, even popping an aspirin can save your life." This sentence can be rewritten without changing the meaning as

(1) When a snake has not injected enough venom, life can be saved even by swallowing an aspirin.

(2) Life can be saved even by swallowing an aspirin, even though the snake hasn't injected enough venom.

(3) Even popping an aspirin can save your life, in spite of a snake not having injected enough venom.

(4) As long as you are popping an aspirin to save your life, the snake will not inject enough venom.
Ans: (1)

9. Pick out a word from the passage, that power to cause death'. means 'having the (Para 5)

(1) immobilise

(2) voluntarily

(3) lethal

(4) serum
Ans: (3)

Directions: Read the poem given below and answer the questions that follow (Q. No. 10 -105) by selecting the most appropriate option.
Common Cold

1 Go hang yourself, you old M.D.! You shall not sneer at me. Pick up your hat and stethoscope, Go wash your mouth with laundry soap; I contemplate a joy exquisite I'm not paying you for your visit. I did not call you to be told My malady is a common cold.

2 By pounding brow and swollen lip; By fever's hot and scaly grip; By those two red redundant eyes That weep like woeful April skies; By racking snuffle, snort, and sniff; By handkerchief after handkerchief; This cold you wave away as naught Is the damnedest cold man ever caught !

3 Bacilli swarm within my portals Such as were ne'er conceived by mortals, But bred by scientists wise and hoary In some Olympic laboratory; Bacteria as large as mice, With feet of fire and heads of ice
Who never interrupt for slumber Their stamping elephantine rumba.

10. What is the emotion that the poet displays in the first stanza ?

(1) Anger

(2) Joy

(3) Jealousy

(4) Sympathy
Ans: (3)
11. Why and at whom does the poet show his emotion?

(1) At an old man because he has sneered at the poet

(2) At a doctor for an incorrect diagnosis of his medical condition

(3) At a friend who is happy at the poet's plight

(4) At a doctor who has said the poet merely has a cold
Ans: (4)

12. The poet describes his eyes as 'two red redundant eyes' because .

(1) he cannot see properly due to the cold

(2) they show how furious the poet is

(3) they have been affected by an eye-disease

(4) in his medical condition the poet is imagining things
Ans: (1)

13. 'Bacteria as large as mice' is an instance of a/ an

(1) simile and a hyperbole

(2) metaphor

(3) personification

(4) alliteration
Ans:

14. 'Who never interrupt for slumber Their stamping elephantine rumba.' The meaning of these lines is that

(1) the bacteria are continuously stamping their elephant-like feet

(2) the cold-causing germs are causing much discomfort and pain to the poet without any break

(3) the bacilli are so active that they refuse to go to sleep

(4) the poet is not able to concentrate on his work due to the raging cold
Ans: (2)

15. The general tone of the poem can be described as

(1) satirical and harsh

(2) ironical and mocking

(3) whimsical and humorous

(4) sad and tragic
Ans: (1)

Directions: Answer the following questions by selecting the most appropriate option.

16. The Constructivist Approach to learning means

(1) involving the students in a variety of activities to encourage them to learn new words and structures by accommodating them with those that they have already learnt through a process of discovery

(2) teaching rules of grammar and consolidating through rigorous practice

(3) helping learners acquire new vocabulary by studying literature intensively

(4) teaching new words and structures using a variety of audio-visual aids followed by practice through drill
Ans: (1)

17. What is the skill among the ones given below that cannot be tested in a formal written examination?

(1) Reading for information

(2) Meaning of words and phrases

(3) Extensive reading for pleasure

(4) Analysing texts
Ans: (3)

18. Which of the following is suitable for making students responsible for their own learning?

(1) Discouraging students from making decisions about how they learn best

(2) Using technology to chat and network

(3) Encouraging students to ask more and more questions

(4) Giving a lot of homework, project work and assignments to improve language skills of students
Ans: (3)

19. Ania, while teaching paragraph construction, should draw attention to

(1) a large variety of ideas

(2) originality of ideas

(3) topic sentence, supporting details and connectors

(4) a range of vocabulary
Ans: (3)

20. Communicative Language Teaching is concerned with

(1) teaching of vocabulary and grammar through rules of spelling and language

(2) teaching language to learners for written tests

(3) interpreting grammar rules to suit the audience

(4) enhancing receptive and productive skills such as speaking, listening, reading and writing
Ans: (4)

21. Formative Assessment is assessment

(1) of learning

(2) at learning

(3) in learning

(4) for learning
Ans: (1)

22. The term 'Comprehensive' in Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation means

(1) scholastic development

(2) co-scholastic development

(3) academic skills

(4) scholastic and co-scholastic development
Ans:

23. A teacher designs a test to find out the cause of the poor grades of her learners through alan

(1) Diagnostic Test

(2) Proficiency Test

(3) Achievement Test

(4) Aptitude Test
Ans: (1)

24. An inclusive class is that in which

(1) differently abled learners study with normal students

(2) students from different nationalities study together

(3) students from different religions study together

(4) both boys and girls study together
Ans: (1)

25. 'Concrete Operational Stage' refers to those learners who are

(1) adolescents

(2) at middle level

(3) toddlers

(4) adults
Ans: (2)

26. When learners are engaged in a pair activity, taking on roles of a doctor and a patient, the activity is called

(1) Real Activity

(2) Declamation

(3) Simulation

(4) Exchanging notes
Ans: (3)

27. Essays or long writing tasks especially on a discursive issue should

(1) help students develop their literary skills

(2) help students with grammar

(3) help them to improve their handwriting

(4) help them discuss the different points of view and justify them with illustrative points
Ans: (4)

28. A teacher, Amrita, uses various tasks such as creating charts, graphs, drawing, gathering information and presenting them through pair or group work. This differentiated instruction

(1) helps learners with multiple intelligences to perform well and learn better

(2) is a way of demonstrating her own knowledge

(3) only helps the bright learners

(4) is the best way to prepare students for an assessment
Ans:

29. Using a word bank and brainstorming helps to build

(1) Vocabulary

(2) Ideas

(3) Writing skills

(4) Reading comprehension
Ans: (1)

30. Gender stereotypes and bias among learners can be discouraged by

(1) enabling all learners to cook and sew irrespective of gender

(2) using textbooks which do perpetuate such beliefs

(3) creating an open and encouraging atmosphere in a mixed class

(4) pressuring girls to learn cooking
Ans: (1)

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Directions: Answer the following questions by selecting the most appropriate option.
31. The ratio between the length and the perimeter of a rectangular plot is 1:3. What is the ratio between the length and breadth of the plot?
(1) 1: 2
(2) 2: 1
(3) 3: 2
(4) Data inadequate
Ans: (2)




32. If a * b = a2 + b2 and a . b = a2 - b2 , the value of (5 * 2) . 25 is
(1) 215
(2) 225
(3) 226
(4) 216
Ans: (4)





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33. If a, b and c are three natural numbers in ascending order, then
(1) c2 - a2 > b
(2) c2 - a2 = b2 
(3) c2 - a2 < b2   
(4) c2 + b2 = a2
Ans: (1)


34. 'Buy three, get one free.' What is the percentage of discount being offered here ?

(1) 33.33%     

(2) 25%    

(3) 20%     

(4) 28.56%
Ans: (1)
35. The Value of √2 + √3 + √2 - √3 is
(1) √6
(2) 6
(3) 2√2
(4) 2√3
Ans: (3)
36. When recast, the radius of an iron rod is made one-fourth. If its volume remains constant, then the new length will become

(1) 1/4 times of the original

(2) 1/16 times of the original

(3) 16 times of the original

(4) 4 times of the original
Ans: (3)

37. Find the value of 547527/82 if 547.527/0.0082 = x

(1) x/10

(2) 10 x

(3) 100 x

(4) x/100
Ans: (3)
38. The smallest number by which 68600 must be multiplied to get a perfect cube is

(1) 5

(2) 10

(3) 8

(4) 12
Ans: (1)

39. A cyclist at 'C' is cycling towards 'B'. How far will he have to cycle from C before he is equidistant from both A and B ?





(1) 4 km

(2) 3 km

(3) 6 km

(4) 5 km
Ans: (4)



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40. Unit's digit in 132003 is

(1) 1    

(2) 3    

(3) 7    

(4) 9
Ans: (3)
41. A square sheet ABCD when rotated on its diagonal AC as its axis of rotation sweeps a




(1) cone

(2) spindle

(3) cylinder

(4) trapezium
Ans: (2)




42. The area of a triangle with base x units is equal to the area of a square with side x units. Then the altitude of the triangle is

(1) x/2 units

(2) x units

(3) 2x units

(4) 3x units
Ans: (3)

43. Which is greatest among 33 and half %; 4/15 and 0.35 ?

(1) 33 and half %

(2) 4/15

(3) 0.35

(4) Cannot be compared
Ans: (3)
44. The factorisation of 25 - p2 - q2 - 2pq is

(1) (5 + p + q) (5 - p + q)

(2) (5 + p + q) (5 - P - q)

(3) (5 + p - q) (5 - p + q)

(4) (5 + p - q) (5 - p - q)
Ans: (2)
45. A rectangle is divided horizontally into two equal parts. The upper part is further divided into three equal parts and the lower part is divided into four equal parts.Which fraction of the original rectangle the shaded part ?



(1) 3/5

(2) 2/7

(3) 4/7

(4) 7/12
Ans: (4)

46. In the given figure, PS = SQ = SR and  L SPQ = 54°. Find the measure of  L x.




(1) 54°

(2) 72°

(3) 108°

(4) 36°
Ans: (1)
47. 2x - 13, 2x - 11, 2x - 9, 2x - 7 are consecutive

(1) Prime numbers

(2) Even numbers

(3) Odd numbers

(4) Natural numbers
Ans: (3)

48. The fractional equivalent of 57.12% (approx.) is

(1) 349/625

(2) 359/625

(3) 357/625

(4) 347/625
Ans: (3)

49. The ratio of the side and height of an equilateral triangle is

(1) 2 : 1

(2) 1 : 1

(3) 2 : √3

(4) √3 : 2
Ans: (3)

50. If two adjacent sides of a square paper are decreased by 20% and 40% respectively, by what percentage does the new area decrease?

(1) 48%

(2) 50%

(3) 52%

(4) 60%
Ans:
51. 4/16 - 1/8 = 3/8

6/7 - 2/9 = 4/2

The above represents the work of a student. If this error pattern continues, the student's answer to 5/11 - 2/7 will be

(1) 7/18

(2) 3/4

(3) 3/7

(4) 2/18
Ans: (2)
52. A teacher in grade-VI provided each child with a centimeter grid paper and a pair of scissors. She wanted them to explore how two-dimensional shapes can be folded into three-dimensional objects. Which of the following concepts are the students exploring?

(1) Rotation

(2) Reflection

(3) Nets

(4) Decimals
Ans:
53. When doing exponents, the work observed in a learner's notebook was as follows :

43 x 42 = 45

64 x 64 = 68

73 x 37 = 2110

The learner has not understood how to

(1) add exponents

(2) add exponents and multiply

(3) multiply numbers with same base

(4) multiply numbers with different bases
Ans: (4)

54. Teachers, while discussing problem-solving as an approach to teaching of mathematics, articulated four views. Which of the following views doesnot justify the real meaning of this approach?

(1) 'I think questions on problem-solving should be made from situations based on real life.'

(2) 'I think many questions found in the mathematics textbook can be used for problem-solving.'

(3) 'I think it is better to connect problem-solving with general mathematics class.' 

(4) 'I think there is no correlation between problem-solving and mathematical reasoning.'
Ans:

55. Given linear equations I, II and III, a learner is not able to solve III algebraically. The most likely area of difficulty is that the learner has not understood

           
               

(1) that two equations can be added or subtracted to solve them

(2) that two equations can be solved by method of substitution

(3) the method of solving equations using graphs

(4) that both the equations in III can be altered by multiplying with suitable numbers
Ans: (2)

56.When introducing mensuration, a teacher writes all the formulae on the board before proceeding further. This reflects that she is following the

(1) Inductive approach

(2) Deductive approach

(3) Experimental approach

(4) Practical approach
Ans: (2)
57. Ameena is playing with matchsticks and adds one  at each stage :  Appu, on the other hand, makes a table: 
Number of L's123...
Number of matchsticks246..


What is your observation about the two children in this situation?

(1) Ameena is only playing and Appu is doing mathematics

(2) Ameena will need lots of matchsticks to come to a generalisation. However, Appu would be faster

(3) Both Ameena and Appu are trying to make generalisations

(4) Ameena would be learning by doing and Appu may not be able to see the pattern at all
Ans: (1)

58. To be good in mathematics, one needs to

(1) remember solutions

(2) have mastery over calculations

(3)  create and formulate problems through abstract thinking and logical reasoning

(4) memorise formulae
Ans: (3)

59. Students make errors while solving mathematical problems because 

(1) they do not practise enough

(2) they do not refer to multiple textbooks

(3) their socio-economic status affects their performance

(4) they make alternative interpretations of concepts in their attempt to make meaning
Ans: (4)    

60. With an activity on paper folding, a teacher was trying to depict the relationship of the areas of a parallelogram and a triangle. Which of the following best depicts the transformation of stages?
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Ans: (4)
61. Bakelite is used in making electrical appliances because it is a

(1) thermoplastic

(2) good conductor of heat

(3) good conductor of electricity

(4) good insulator of electricity
Ans: (4)

62. In which of the following cases of motion, are the distance moved and the magnitude of displacement equal ?

(1) A car moving on a straight road

(2) A car moving in a circular path

(3) A pendulum oscillating to and fro

(4) The Earth revolving around the Sun
Ans: (1)

63. LED and CFL are very commonly used as sources of light in homes. Which of the following statements is true ?

(1) CFL is better because LED contains toxic materials

(2) LED is better because CFL contains toxic materials

(3) Both are equally good

(4) Neither of them is good because both contain toxic materials
Ans: (2)

64. An air bubble inside water behaves like a

(1) concave lens    

(2) convex lens

(3) plano-convex lens

(4) concave mirror
Ans: (1)

65. A feather weighing 5 gm and a nail weighing 10 gm have the same kinetic energy. Which of the following statements is true about the momentum of the two bodies ?     

(1) The lighter body will have higher momentum

(2) The heavier body will have higher momentum

(3) Both will have equal momentum

(4) It is not possible to compare the momentum. of two objects
Ans: (2)
66. If the pressure over a liquid increases, its boiling point

(1) decreases

(2) Increases

(3) does not change

(4) first decreases and then increases
Ans: (2)

67. A doctor prescribes a medicine to treat hyperacidity. The main ingredient of the medicine is 

(1) Al(OH)3

(2) MgCl2

(3) CaC03

(4) Na2C03
Ans: (1)

68. Non-metallic oxides

(1) are acidic in nature

(2) are basic in nature

(3) are amphoteric in nature

(4) turn red litmus paper blue
Ans: (1)

69. The inner surfaces of food cans are coated with tin and not with zinc because

(1) zinc is costlier than tin

(2) zinc is more reactive than tin

(3) zinc has a higher melting point than tin

(4) zinc is less reactive than tin
Ans: (2)

70. A man goes door to door posing as a goldsmith. He promises to bring back the glitter on dull gold ornaments. An unsuspecting woman gives a set of gold bangles to him which he dips in a particular solution. The bangles sparkle but their weight has considerably reduced. The solution used by the impostor probably is

(1) dil. HCI

(2) cone. HCI

(3) a mixture of cone. HCI and cone. HN03

(4) cone. HN03
Ans: (3)
71. Bleeding is stopped by the application of alum to a wound because

(1) the wound is plugged by the alum chunk

(2) alum coagulates the blood and forms a clot

(3) alum reduces the temperature near the wound

(4) alum is an antiseptic
Ans: (2)

72. When an iron nail is dipped in copper sulphate solution, the colour of copper sulphate solution fades and a brownish layer is deposited over the iron nail. This is an example of 

(1) combination reaction 

(2) decomposition reaction 

(3) double displacement reaction 

(4) displacement and redox reactions
Ans: (4)

73. While diluting sulphuric acid, it is recommended that the acid should be added to water because 

(1) acid has strong affinity for water 

(2) acid may break the glass container 

(3) dilution of acid is highly exothermic 

(4) dilution of acid is highly endothermic
Ans: (3)

74. The thumb of humans moves more freely than other fingers due to the presence of 

(1) pivotal joint 

(2) gliding joint 

(3) hinge joint 

(4) saddle joint
Ans: (4)

75. Root cap is absent in 

(1) Xerophytes 

(2) Hydrophytes 

(3) Mesophytes 

(4) Halophytes
Ans: (2)

76. Adding salt and sugar to food substances helps In preserving them for a longer duration. It is because excess salt and sugar 

(1) plasmolyse the microbial cells 

(2) cause rupturing of microbial cells 

(3) cause change in the shape of microbial cells 

(4) remove water from food
Ans: (1)

77. Hormone Adrenaline 

(1) helps control level of sugar in the blood 

(2) helps the body to adjust stress level when one is very angry or worried 

(3) helps control height 

(4) helps control balance of electrolytes in the body
Ans: (2)

78. The green house effect which is causing an increase in the atmospheric temperature is mainly due to 

(1) oxygen 

(2) nitrogen 

(3) carbon dioxide 

(4) sulphur
Ans: (3)

79. Green plants appear to release oxygen instead of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere during the day time because 

(1) green plants do not respire during the night time 

(2) green plants respire only during the night time 

(3) green plants respire during the day time but are involved in photosynthesis during the night time 

(4) the rate of photosynthesis is higher than the rate of respiration during the day time
Ans: (4)

80. A common characteristic feature of plant sieve-tube cells and mammalian erythrocytes is 

(1) absence of nucleus 

(2) absence of chloroplast 

(3) absence of cell wall 

(4) presence of haemoglobin
Ans: (1)
81. Most Boards of Education have banned the dissection of animals because 

(1) animals are no longer available for dissection 

(2) procuring animals has become an expensive proposition 

(3) there is a need to sensitise students to prevention of cruelty to animals 

(4) they may spread new diseases
Ans: (3)
 
82. The main aim of conducting Mathematics and Science Olympiads is to 

(1) promote excellence in the subject by nurturing creativity and experimentation 

(2) grade students according to their capabilities 

(3) help students score high marks in professional examinations 

(4) grade schools based on the performance of their students
Ans: (1)

83. Four applicants for a post of TGT (Science) were asked to plan a lesson on "Consequences of Deforestation", Which one of the following lesson plans reflects the scientific approach ? 

(1) Explains in detail the consequences of deforestation 

(2) Provides a variety of examples to explain the concept 

(3) Includes activities that children can perform in groups and draw conclusions through a Power Point presentation 

(4) Mentions about the use of ICT to help students understand the concept
Ans: (3)

84. Ms. Patel, Principal of a School XYZ, is keen about integrated approach to teaching of Science rather than teaching different disciplines separately. The basis of this is 

(1) non-availability of qualified teachers in her school to teach separate disciplines 

(2) difficulty to adjust the teachers in the time-table 

(3) difficulty of students to adjust to different teachers 

(4) all the disciplines are interlinked and a teacher can draw on cross-curricular linkages
Ans: (4)

85. A teacher plans to teach "Components of Food" in Class-VI. Which of the following can be used as an essential question ? 

(1) List the food items your mother serves you in lunch. 

(2) Why does your mother serve you a meal with a variety of food items ? 

(3) Does your mother prepare a definite set of food items for lunch every day? 

(4) Do you eat all the items served in your lunch every day?
Ans: (2)

86. While teaching the concept, "force can change the shape of an object" to students, a teacher plans the following activities: 

a. Explain concepts using commonly observed examples. 

b. Provide a dough on a plate and ask the students to press it down with the hand. 

c. Show an audio-visual• film explaining the concept with some examples. 

The teacher is using different approaches to learning because 

(1) she wants to prove her knowledge 

(2) she knows she must follow her lesson plan 

(3) she wants to prepare students for a test 

(4) there are different kinds of learners in the class and she wants to address multiple intelligences
Ans: 

87. Which of the following can be assessed when Geeta is using only MCQ as a tool to assess "Nutrition in Humans" ? 

(1) Analytical ability to classify food items and make a poster 

(2) Misconceptions related to food habits 

(3) Learners' ability to apply knowledge and prepare a role play to present in the morning assembly 

(4) Learners' ability to comprehend the importance of components of food and write a long essay
Ans: (2)

88. A Science teacher plans group activities to teach "Properties of Air" to her students of Class-VI. Which one set of attributes would she like to have in the students she selects as group leaders ? 

(1) Freedom to choose roles, work at their own pace and understanding 

(2) Ordering students to take roles and deliver in consonance with their understanding 

(3) Giving major roles to brighter students to ensure the group finishes first 

(4) Assigning roles as per capability, motivating and coordinating among the group members
Ans: (4)

89. While selecting a performance task to help students develop research oriented skills in a Science class, a teacher may pick up a topic 

(1) from the content given in the syllabus which must be completed in time 

(2) which majority of the students in a class find interesting 

(3) which she thinks is important for the students 

(4) related to a problem faced by students in their day-to-day functioning and which is a part of the concepts to be covered for this class
Ans: (4)

90. While investigating 'how water affects the germination of seeds', a teacher asked the students to soak bean seeds on a bed of cotton wool for a few days and observe the changes. What is the guideline that she forgot to mention? 
To place 

(1) many seeds on wet cotton 

(2) a few seeds on wet cotton 

(3) many seeds on dry cotton 

(4) a few seeds on dry cotton
Ans: (2)