Original Reading Comprehensionn Worksheet:
A feathery surprise READING COMPREHENSION WORKSHEET.pdf
1ST ATTEMPT: Gemini
MY PROMPT:
The attached file is a reading comprehension worksheet for lower primary ESL students in Hong Kong.
Please create a similar worksheet as follows:
- start with a reading passage of a similar length, and similar level of language diffiiculty. The passage should be a fairy tale.
- Then create Part 1 of the reading comprehension exercise. Part 1 should consist of 4 Wh-questions that ask students for complete-sentence answers. Two of the four questions should each ask for examples. The other two questions should each ask for reasons.
- Then create Part 2 of the reading comprehension exercise. Part 2 should consist of 5 True/False questions.
- Please then provide an Answer Key to the whole worksheet.
OUTPUT:
(a) by Gemini: https://docs.google.com/document/d/15VkqkgA5T7gkvzrTqDhb_YK4a3T5eYQj1p6G4R7Q7i8/edit?usp=sharing
2ND ATTEMPT: BRISK TEACHING
PROMPT suggested by Brisk Teaching based on original Gemini prompt:
You are creating a reading comprehension worksheet for lower primary ESL learners (approximately Grade 1-2 equivalent, ages 6-8) in Hong Kong. The students are developing foundational English literacy skills with beginner to early intermediate proficiency.
Please create a complete worksheet that includes:
A reading passage: Write an original fairy tale of 80-120 words using simple, concrete vocabulary and short sentences. The language should feature present tense, high-frequency words, and familiar story structures (e.g., character introduction, simple problem, resolution). Avoid complex subordinate clauses and idiomatic expressions. The passage should be engaging for young learners and include clear narrative sequence.
Part 1 - Comprehension Questions: Create 4 Wh-questions (Who, What, Where, When, Why, or How) that require complete-sentence answers at the recall and inference level (DOK 1-2). Structure the questions as follows: two questions should ask students to provide examples from the story (e.g., "What are two things the character did?"), and two questions should ask students to explain reasons or causes (e.g., "Why did the character feel happy?"). Ensure questions are phrased simply and directly.
Part 2 - True/False Statements: Create 5 True/False statements based on explicit and implicit details from the passage. Include a mix of obviously true statements, obviously false statements, and one that requires careful reading to determine accuracy.
Answer Key: Provide complete, model answers for all 9 questions that show the expected level of detail and sentence structure for this grade level.
Format the worksheet clearly with sections labeled and numbered for classroom use.
OUTPUT:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1yhT0CPjA6lwS_OvN8pA3nDax7WNvkh6R-e-3Od_SIhM/edit?tab=t.0
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