Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views10 pages

Year_6_MOCK

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 10

Semester 1 Assessment October 2024 Year 6

CANDIDATE NAME

DATE

English

PAPER 1 45 minutes
Marks- 35
Fiction

You must answer on the question paper.


No additional materials are needed.

INFORMATION

This insert contains the reading texts.


You may annotate this insert and use the blank spaces for planning. Do not write your answers on the insert.
2

Text for Section A, an extract from The Eye of the Wolf by Daniel Pennac

ONE

The boy standing in front of the wolf’s cage doesn’t move a muscle. The wolf paces backwards and
forwards. He walks the length of the enclosure and back again without stopping.

He’s starting to get on my nerves, the wolf thinks to himself. For the last two hours the boy has 5

been standing in front of the wire fencing, as still as a frozen tree, watching the wolf walking.

What does he want from me? the wolf wonders. He’s not worried (because wolves aren’t afraid of
anything), just curious. What does he want?

The other children jump and run about, shout and burst into tears, stick their tongues out at the
wolf and hide their heads in their mum’s skirts. But this boy is different. He stands there silently, 10
without moving a muscle. Only his eyes shift. They follow the wolf as he paces the length of the
wire fencing.

What’s your problem? Haven’t you seen a wolf before?

The wolf only sees the boy every other time he passes him. That’s because the wolf only has
one eye. He lost the other one ten years ago, the day he was captured. So on his outward 15

journey (if you can call it a journey) the wolf sees the zoo with all its cages, the children making
faces and, standing in the middle of it all, the boy who doesn’t move a muscle. On the return
journey (if you can call it a journey) the wolf sees the inside of his enclosure. It’s an empty
enclosure with a solitary rock and dead tree. When the wolf turns round, there’s the boy again, breathing
steadily, his white breath hanging in the cold air. 20

He’ll give up before I do, thinks the wolf, and he carries on walking.

I’m the wolf.

TWO

But the first thing the wolf sees when he wakes up the next day is the boy, standing in exactly
the same spot in front of his enclosure. The wolf nearly jumps out of his fur. 25

He can’t have spent the night here!


He calms down and begins to pace again, as if nothing is out of the ordinary.

His paws don’t make a sound when they touch the ground. He moves from one end of the
enclosure to the other like a silent pendulum inside a grandfather clock. The boy’s eyes move
slowly, as if he’s following a game of tennis in slow motion. 30

Does he really think I’m that interesting?

The wolf frowns. The bristles on his muzzle stand on end. Sometimes the wolf would take a
break from pacing. Up until last week, that is. He and the she-wolf would sit facing visitors. It
was as if they couldn’t see them. He and the she-wolf would stare straight ahead. They stared
straight through them. It made the visitors feel like they didn’t even exist. It was spooky. 35
3

‘What are they looking at in that strange way?’ ‘What can they see?’

But then the she-wolf, who was grey and white like a snow partridge, died. The wolf hasn’t
stopped moving since. He walks from morning to evening. Outside, straight as a letter i (imagine
the dot is his white breath hanging in the air), the boy watches him. 40

THREE

The next day the boy is there again.

The wolf is starting to feel worn out now. The boy’s stare seems to weigh a ton. At least the zoo
will be closed tomorrow. Once a month there’s a special day when the zookeepers check on the
animals’ health and repair their cages. No visitors are allowed. 45

That’ll get him off my back.

Wrong again. The next day, just like all the other days, the boy is there. He seems to be more present
than ever – all alone in front of the enclosure, all alone in an empty zoo.

All right, thinks the wolf. You’ve asked for it! And suddenly he stops walking. He sits bolt upright opposite
the boy. And he starts staring back. He doesn’t look through him. It’s a real stare, a 50

fixed stare.

There isn’t a single visitor in the zoo.


There’s just the boy.
And the wolf with blue fur.
So you want to stare at me? Fine? I’ll stare at you too. And we’ll soon see... 55

But there’s something bothering the wolf. A silly detail. He’s only got one eye and the boy’s got
two. The wolf doesn’t know which of the boy’s eyes to stare into. He hesitates. His single eye
jumps: right-left, left-right. The boy’s eyes don’t flinch. He doesn’t flutter an eyelash. The wolf
feels extremely uneasy. He won’t turn his head away for the whole world. His eye begins to lose control.
Soon, across the scar of his dead eye, a tear appears. Not because he’s sad, but out of 60

a sense of helplessness and anger.

So the boy does something strange that calms the wolf. The boy closes an eye.

Now they’re looking into each other’s eye, in a zoo that’s silent and empty, and they’ve got all the time in
the world.
4

Semester 1 Assessment October 2024 Year 6

CANDIDATE NAME

DATE

English

PAPER 1 45 minutes
Fiction Marks- 35
You must answer on the question paper.

No additional materials are needed.

INSTRUCTIONS

• Answer all questions.


• Use a black or dark blue pen. You may use an HB pencil for any diagrams or graphs.
• Write your name, centre number and candidate number in the boxes at the top of the page.
• Write your answer to each question in the space provided.
• Do not use an erasable pen or correction fluid.
• Do not write on any bar codes.
INFORMATION

• The total mark for this paper is 35.


• The number of marks for each question or part question is shown in brackets [ ]
5

Section A: Reading

Spend 35 minutes on this section.

Read the text in the insert, and answer Questions 1–11.

1 Look at lines 3–4.


Find an idiom which means ‘to stay completely still’.

[1]

2 Look at lines 5–13.


The writer uses different literary techniques within these lines. Name two of the techniques and
give an example of each from the text. One has been completed for you.

Literary Technique Example

simile as still as a frozen tree

[4]

3 Look at lines 14–22.


How does the writer show that the enclosure is inadequate for the wolf? Give two ideas. Support
each idea with a quotation from the text.

First idea:

Quotation:
6

Second idea:

Quotation:

[4]

4 Look at lines 24–40.


Do you think the one-eyed wolf is upset that the she-wolf is gone? Tick () one box.

Yes

No

Explain your answer with two reasons from the text.


[2]

5 Look at lines 42–48. Give one phrase that shows the wolf is increasingly aware of the boy.

[1]

6 (a) Look at lines 49–54.


Explain how the writer uses text structure to slow down the pace of the story, almost
to a stop. Give two ideas. •

[2]
7

(b) Why does the writer slow the pace down?

[1]

7 Why does the wolf start to cry?


Tick () one box.

panic
sympathy
frustration
unhappiness

[1]

8 Look at the last sentence. How does the writer create a sense of calm?

[1]

9 (a) Look at the two opinions about the wolf.


Which opinion do you agree with most? Tick () one box.

The wolf is tough and mentally strong.

The wolf is not as tough as he thinks he is.

Give two quotations from the text to support your choice.

First quotation:

Second quotation:
8

[2]

(b) Whose voices do we hear in the story?

__________________________________________
[1]

Section B: Writing

Spend 35 minutes on this section.

10 The wolf and the boy stand eye to eye on either side of the wolf’s enclosure. Each has an
extraordinary story about how they came to be there.

Tell the story of the wolf OR the boy.

You should consider:

• where the wolf or the boy came from


• what the wolf or the boy did there and with whom
• how the wolf or the boy ended up in the zoo.

Space for planning-

Write your story on the next page. [15 marks]


9
10

You might also like