Reading Standards for Informational Text: Analyzing Multiple Accounts of the Same Event (CCSS.RI.5.6) Practice Test
•20 QuestionsPassage 1 (Op-Ed): The new Maple Street Library may look shiny, but the plan ignores basic downtown needs. My café depends on street parking, and the library took eight spots for a loading zone that sits empty most of the day. Taxes paid for a 3D printer when our sidewalks still crack. The city promises "foot traffic," yet story time happens at 10 a.m., when most people already have coffee. I value reading, but a smaller renovation would have been smarter. We could have fixed the roof on the old building and kept the budget reasonable. Progress should help everyone, not just make headlines.
Passage 2 (Teen Blog): I've waited all year for the Maple Street Library to open, and it was worth it. The new study rooms mean my science team can finally meet without whispering. After school, the makerspace buzzed: a librarian taught me to use the 3D printer to build a prototype for our bridge project. When the rain started, kids poured into the bright lobby to read comics. My little brother begged to try story time tomorrow. The best part? It's two blocks from the bus stop, so everyone can get there. This place isn't just shelves; it's a launchpad for ideas. I'm planning to finish homework there this week.
What conclusion does each passage reach about the new library?
What conclusion does each passage reach about the new library?