CBRC Majorship 01
CBRC Majorship 01
CBRC Majorship 01
Which hypothesis of Krashen’s Monitor Model proposes that when learners are exposed to
grammatical features a little beyond their current (i.e., i + 1), those features are “acquired”?
Acquisition results from comprehensible input, which is made understandable with the help provided
by the context.
A. Acquisition/learning hypothesis
B. Natural order hypothesis
C. Input hypothesis
D. Affective filter hypothesis
2. All of the following are implications of Krashen’s Monitor Model EXCEPT __________.
A. Teachers should correct errors during the time they are committed as error correction is
valuable.
B. Teachers should not insist on learners conversing before they feel comfortable in doing so.
C. Teachers should not expect learners to learn “late structures” such as third person singular
early.
D. Teachers consider grammatical teaching is of limited value.
3. The view the language is a system of related elements or “building blocks” for the encoding of
meaning, the elements being phonemes (sounds), morphemes (words), tagmemes
(phrases/sentences/clauses).
A. Structuralists
B. Transformationalists
C. Functionalists
D. Interactionalists
5. Which theory on language teaching has given birth to the methods that are learner-centered, allowing
learners to work in pairs or groups in information gap tasks and problem-solving activities where
such communication strategies as information sharing, negotiation of meaning, and interaction are
used?
A. Structuralism
B. Behaviorism
C. Cognitivism
D. Functionalism
6. It is a branch of linguistics that deals with how words combine to form phrases, phrases combine to
form clauses, and clauses conjoin to make sentences.
A. Morphology
B. Syntax
C. Semantics
D. Pragmatics
7. What is shown in the systematic variation of /t/ such as /t/ in top is aspirated, /t/ in stop is released,
and /t/ in pot is unreleased?
A. phoneme
B. consonant
C. variation
D. allophone
8. Which of the following sounds are produced by bringing the articulators near each other such that the
flow of air is impeded but not completely blocked? The air flow through the narrow opening creates
friction.
A. p, b, t, d, k, g
B. f, v, Ɵ, ð, s, z, š, ẑ, h
C. m, n, ŋ
D. l, r
9. What is illustrated in the following example? In English, the statement “Marian is a linguist” ends
with a fall in pitch, while as a question, “Marian is a linguist?” the pitch goes up.
A. stress
B. juncture
C. intonation
D. suprasegmentals
11. The words “gym”, “mike”, and “TV” are formed through __________.
A. clipping
B. back formation
C. root creation
D. compounding
12. What morphophonemic process is involved in which units that occur in some contexts are “lost” in
others such as “l i b r y” instead of “l i b r a r y”?
A. assimilation
B. dissimilation
C. epenthesis
D. metathesis
13. Which syntactic structure is shown in the following examples? “responsible officers”, “trusted friend”
A. predication
B. complementation
C. modification
D. coordination
14. What is made use in the example “I told Paul to close the door and he did so”?
A. homonymy
B. anaphora
C. deixis
D. hyponymy
15. What category of illocutionary act is demonstrated in the following example? “Recession will worsen
in Europe in the next five years.”
A. representative
B. commissive
C. directive
D. expressive
16. What conversation maxim seems to have been violated in the following example?
A: How was the LET?
B: Well, the proctor is my former college professor.
A. maxim of quantity
B. maxim of quality
C. maxim of relation
D. maxim of manner
17. This view emphasizes that native language comprises habits that a second language learner must
overcome. This is accomplished by forging new habits through the repetition of pattern drills with
accompanying positive reinforcement.
A. Behaviorist Leaning Theory
B. Cognitive Learning Theory
C. Functional Learning Theory
D. Holistic Learning Theory
18. Overgeneralization errors such as “goed” and “keeped” are common in children’s speech. Such errors
suggest that children __________.
A. are repeating what was said to them, and should take note of them
B. do not know the past tense forms of those verbs, and experience difficulty
C. induce the rules for the past tense from the language to which they are exposed
D. repeat the teacher’s mistakes, and those errors are very hard to undo
19. This type of language is used to describe the kind of language a learner uses at a given time, that is,
his version of a given language, which deviates in certain ways from the language of a mature
speaker.
A. dialect
B. native language
C. holophrastic speech
D. interlanguage
24. The following are the areas of knowledge and skills of communicative competence EXCEPT
__________.
A. grammatical competence
B. sociolinguistic competence
C. discourse competence
D. language competence
26. What strategy is used by the second language learner in the following situation?
The student forgot the English term “train station”. He used the phrase “the place for trains”
instead.
A. inference
B. paraphrase
C. generalization
D. daptation
27. What is the message of the story “The Centipede” by Rony V. Diaz?
A. Childhood memories are treasures.
B. Teasing or taunting should only be done by adults.
C. Children should be responsible with the trick they do with their siblings.
D. Childhood relationships between siblings were sometimes painful.
28. What problem is pointed out by the author in the story “How My Brother Brought Home a Wife” by
Manuel Arguilla?
A. How Filipinos live in the province
B. How Filipinos solve family problems
C. How Filipinos are affected by new technology
D. How Filipinos accept or treat a new family member
29. What is the problem or conflict in the story “The Mats” by Francisco Arcellana?
A. Emilia’s indifference
B. Siblings’ rivalry
C. Mr. Angeles’ emotionality
D. Hunger in the family
30. What truth about life was presented in the story “The Wedding Dance” by Amador Daguio?
A. Some men are not contented with one partner.
B. Women and men are born equal.
C. Culture goes beyond love.
D. Love conquers all.
TO A LOST ONE
Angela Manalang-Gloria
34. What does the line “I shall come to you again with the starlight and the scent of white champacas”
mean?
A. The speaker with champacas will visit his lover at night.
B. The speaker wants his lover to keep and cherish their memories in her heart.
C. The speaker will rise from death to remind his lover of their sweetest moments.
D. The speaker wants to give his lover fresh champacas.
35. This line “You shall not forget, for I am past forgetting” means __________.
A. The speaker wants to be left unforgotten.
B. The speaker wants his lover to forget her past.
C. The speaker wants his past not to be discussed.
D. The speaker wants his past not be forgotten.
36. The line “I shall haunt you” has a/an __________ tone.
A. begging
B. appealing
C. romantic
D. commanding
38. It is a generally accepted first principle of oral interpretation that the reader must be true to
__________.
A. the performance space
B. the author
C. the method
D. the audience
E. his or her training
39. Within the communication process, the area that causes the most breakdown is __________.
A. interference
B. feedback
C. the situation
D. the channel
E. the message
40. David is preparing a speech about why Hollywood became the center of the motion-picture industry
and the impact that its development as the center had on filmmaking. David’s speech should be
organized using which of the following methods?
A. spatial
B. chronological
C. cause-effect
D. problem-solution
E. topical
41. All of the following are correct descriptions of listening behavior EXCEPT __________.
A. careful listening can lead to anticipation of a speaker’s actions
B. people who learn to listen selectively can shut out what is undesirable
C. listening comprises more than one-half of all communication
D. the ability to be a good listener comes naturally, and no training is necessary
E. being an effective communicator means that one must listen to oneself
42. When a group is faced with a problem requiring immediate action, the most effective leadership style
is __________.
A. authoritarian
B. democratic
C. laissez-faire
D. charismatic
E. permissive
43. Schema activation is important to make sense of new information in light of what students already
know, and to make the necessary connection between the two. He following are good activities for
schema activation EXCEPT __________.
A. constructing graphic organizer
B. previewing a passage
C. brainstorming ideas
D. evaluating or assessing ideas
45. The following are principles for designing effective and interesting reading lessons EXCEPT
__________.
A. for reading lessons to be interesting and motivating they must focus on simple themes
B. instructional activities have a teaching rather than a testing focus
C. lessons should be divided into pre-reading, during reading, and post-reading
D. the major activity of the reading lesson is students reading texts
46. Content-Based Instruction (CBI) is based on the common underlying principle that successful
language learning occurs when students are presented with target language material in a meaningful,
contextualized form, with the primary focus on __________.
A. understanding the lessons
B. acquiring information and knowledge
C. making connections between what the learn at school and what they learn outside the school
D. making meaning from what they learn
47. It is a vocabulary strategy which involves the process of breaking up a word into its meaningful
components: the root words, affixes, and suffixes.
A. contextual clues
B. structural analysis
C. summarizing
D. groupings
48. Which of the following questions is best for activating students’ prior knowledge to feel that they are
somehow connected to the topic “snakes” being studied?
A. What do you know about snakes? What snakes are common in your area?
B. What according to the selection are the types of snakes?
C. What did the writer suggest to the person who was bitten by snakes to do?
D. What is the importance of animals such as snakes in ecosystem?
49. If the students think about the knowledge of their own thoughts and the factors that influence their
thinking, they are engaged in the process of __________.
A. artistic thinking
B. metacognition
C. higher-order thinking
D. critical thinking
50. Mrs. Torres wants to find out her students’ schema about storm surge. On the board she writes the
words “storm surge” and encircles them, she, then, asks her students what they know about storm
surge, and helps them cluster the information. What technique does Mrs. Torres use?
A. demonstration
B. vocabulary building
C. semantic mapping
D. deductive reasoning
51. The underlined verbs in the following sentences are classified as __________.
The time is now.
The world became flesh.
We remain silent.
A. intransitive
B. reflexive
C. transitive
D. ascriptive
53. What preferred tense is used for “stage directions and synopses”?
A. present
B. past
C. future
D. present perfect
A. an action that was true in the past and is still relevant to the present
B. a recently completed action
C. an action which was completed before another past action
D. an action continuing at a given point in time
55. All of the following contain verbal EXCEPT __________.
A. Satisfied, the producer began paying the artists.
B. Having recovered her voice, the soprano hit her top notes well.
C. Your mom arrived after you had gone.
D. To see is to believe.
56. What type of mood is indicated in the sentence “How did you come to know about that tragic event?”
A. indicative
B. subjunctive
C. imperative
D. directive
57. The sentence “The child cried when his toy car got broken” follows __________ pattern.
A. N InV
B. N LV Adj
C. N TrV N
D. N InV Adv
58. “Mario, my older brother, fathers there good looking and smart children.” The underlined word
functions as __________.
A. a noun
B. a verb
C. an adjective
D. a possessive
62. “When we arrived, they gave us badges.” Which of the following questions should be asked to find
the direct object?
A. What did we do?
B. When did we arrive?
C. What did they give us?
D. Who gave us badges?
64. Each person’s vocabulary is a continuum. On the one end of the continuum are words the person
knows very well and for which he has full rich understanding of their various meanings. On the other
end of the continuum are __________.
A. words he enjoys using regularly
B. new words that he has learned both the spelling and meaning for
C. words he doesn’t recognize
D. words he can recognize and figure out the meaning of based on context
66. The President himself promised to stop the war. The underlined word is __________ pronoun.
A. an interrogative
B. an intensive
C. a reflexive
D. a reciprocal
68. Which of the following sentences does NOT observe correct subject-verb agreement?
A. The mayor as well as his brothers is going to prison.
B. Neither of the two traffic lights is working.
C. My assets were wiped out in the depression.
D. Neither the plates nor the serving bowl go on that shelf.
69. The pronoun in the sentence “When she arrived, Suad was surprised to find her apartment door open”
is __________.
A. cataphoric
B. anaphoric
C. deitic
D. coreferential
70. The underlined word in the sentence “We elected him chairman” functions as __________.
A. direct object
B. indirect object
C. objective complement
D. predicate nominative
72. The style of writing employed in this passage can be best described as __________.
The stars were shining, and the leaves rustled in the woods ever so mournful; and I heard
an owl, away off, who-whooing about somebody that was dead, and a whippowhil and a dog
crying about somebody that was going to die; and the wind was trying to whisper something to
me, and I couldn’t make out what it was, and so it made the cold shivers run over me.
–The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
A. standard English
B. formal English
C. jargon
D. dialect
73. The author’s use of language in this passage helps to demonstrate the speaker’s __________.
A. lack of intelligence
B. lack of education
C. good-heartedness
D. confusion
74. The author uses imagery in this section to illustrate Huck’s __________.
A. fear and loneliness
B. awareness of his environment
C. loss of his father
D. moral dilemma
75. When doing research on the life of an important figure, you would probably give more credence to a
biography than you would to an autobiography, due to memoirist’s __________.
A. verbosity
B. creativity
C. subjectivity
D. experiences
A. slippery slope
B. red herring
C. strawman
D. circular reasoning
77. Which of the following works of literature was originally written in modern English?
A. The Decameron
B. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
C. War and Peace
D. Paradise Lost
“They tell me you are wicked and I believe
them, for I have seen your painted women
under the gas lamps luring the farm boys.”
– Chicago by Carl Sandburg
A. II only
B. I and II only
C. I, II, and IV only
D. II and IV only
80. The poetry of Walt Whitman is significant in the development of American literature primarily
because he __________.
A. used the epic form to tell distinctly American tales
B. developed his own poetic form and style instead of adhering to the traditional poetic forms
C. commemorated in verse the lives of public leaders like Abraham Lincoln
D. was heavily influenced by Emerson’s call for a new national poet
81. The following words: “edit” from “editor” and “beg” from “beggar” are formed through __________.
A. blending
B. back formation
C. derivation
D. clipping
82. Which of the following sentences should be revised in order to correct an error?
(01) The themes of liberty and freedom are central to much of American literature,
particularly the literature produced during the American Renaissance. (2) As the issues of
women’s rights and abolition came to the forefront of the American consciousness, writers delved
deep into an exploration of the meaning of freedom for the country and for individuals. (3) Three
such writers from this time period who focus on issues of freedom are Margaret Fuller, Harriet
Beecher Stowe, and Harriet Jacobs. (4) Each of these writers develop an answer to the question
posed by Stowe in Uncle Toms’ Cabin: “Liberty! – electric world! What is it?”
83. Which of the following English words is commonly pronounced with the vowel sound /ǝ/ (i.e.,
schwa)?
A. where
B. who
C. what
D. why
84. Why do most fathers prefer a son __________ a daughter for his first-born child?
A. to
B. than
C. from
D. over
89. Arthur Miller’s play “Death of a Salesman” has been called a “tragedy of the common man” because
it __________.
A. depicts the fall from grace of an important person
B. fits Aristotle’s formal definition of tragedy
C. gives an ordinary salesman’s life weight and meaning
D. is written in poetic and serious style
90. He holds the distinction of being the first Asian to receive the Nobel Prize for literature.
A. Wole Soyinka
B. Yasunari Kawabata
C. Po Chu-I
D. Rabindranath Tagore
91. Which outline correctly organizes and categorizes information pertaining to the works of William
Shakespeare?
A. I. Plays
a. Tragedies
1. King Lear…
b. Histories
1. Richard III…
c. Comedies
1. Twelfth Night…
II. Poems
B. I. Plays
a. Tragedies
1. Hamlet…
b. Poems
1. My Mistress’ Eyes…
c. Comedies
1. All’s Well That Ends Well…
II. Histories
C. I. Plays
a. Tragedies
1. Comedies…
b. Histories
1. Henry V…
c. Poems
1. Not Marble Nor the Gilded Monuments
II. The Tempest
D. I. Plays
a. Tragedies
1. Hamlet…
b. Histories
1. King Lear…
c. Comedies
1. Titus Adronicus…
II. Poems
A. Victor
B. Elizabeth
C. the monster
D. the author
93. “A part of its orb was at length hid, and I waved my brand; it sank, and with a loud scream I fired the
straw, and heath, and bushes, which I had collected.” – from the passage
94. A Marxist interpretation of “Waiting for Godot” would probably focus on __________.
A. the poverty and despair of its working-class characters
B. the use of archetypes in the portrayals of the characters
C. the power imbalances in the relationships of the characters
D. the reliance of the two main characters on the eventual arrival of a “savior”
95. In paragraph 2, Mandy Ringer and Dr. Clevenger are mentioned in order to emphasize which point
about Sapphira and the Slave Girl?
Sapphira and the Slave Girl was the last novel of Willa Cather's illustrious literary career.
Begun in the late summer of 1937 and finally completed in 1941, it is often regarded by critics as
one of her more personal works. Although the story takes place in 1856, well before her own
birth, she drew heavily on both vivid childhood memories and tales handed down by older
relatives to describe life in rural northern Virginia in the middle of the 19th century. She even
went on an extended journey to the area to give the story a further ring of authenticity.
Of all of Cather's many novels, Sapphira and the Slave Girl is the one most concerned
with providing an overall picture of day-to-day life in a specific era. A number of the novel's
characters, it would seem, are all included in the story only because they are representative of the
types of people to be found in 19th century rural Virginia; indeed, a few of them play no part
whatsoever in the unfolding of the plot. For instance, we are introduced to a poor white woman,
Mandy Ringer, who is portrayed as intelligent and content, despite the fact that she has no formal
education and must toil constantly in the fields. And we meet Dr. Clevenger, a country doctor
who, with his patrician manners, evokes a strong image of pre-Civil War South.
The title, however, accurately suggests that the novel is mainly about slavery. Cather's
attitude toward this institution may best be summed up as somewhat ambiguous. On the other
hand, she displays almost total indifference to the legal and political aspects of slavery when she
misidentifies certain crucial dates in its growth and development. Nor does she ever really offer a
direct condemnation of slavery. Yet, on the other hand, the evil that was slavery gets through to
us, albeit in typically subtle ways. Those characters, like Mrs. Blake, who oppose the institution,
are portrayed in a sympathetic light. Furthermore, the suffering of the slaves themselves and the
petty, nasty, often cruel, behavior of the slave owners are painted in stark terms.
Although Sapphira and the Slave Girl was certainly not meant to be a political tract, the
novel is sometimes considered to be a denunciation of bygone days. Nothing could be further
from the truth. In spite of her willingness to acknowledge that particular aspects of the past were
far from ideal, Willa Cather was, if anything, a bit of a romantic. Especially in the final years of
her life, an increasing note of anger about the emptiness of the present crept into her writings.
Earlier generations, she concluded, had been the real heroes, the real creators of all that was good
in America.
A. A number of the characters in the novel are based on people Cather knew in her childhood.
B. The novel displays Cather’s mixed feelings about slavery.
C. Cather took four years to complete the novel because she carefully researched her characters.
D. One of Cather’s purposes in writing the novel was to paint a full portrait of life in rural
Virginia in the years before the Civil War.
E. The characters in the novel are portrayed in a positive light since Cather was a great admirer
of the old South.
97. The works of Charles Dickens, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Upton Sinclair __________.
A. examined 19th-century cultural values
B. broke with the literary traditions of the past
C. fought against the mistreatment of the working class
D. awakened readers to social wrongs
98. The writing style used by Salman Rushdie and Gabriel Garcia Marquez is most often referred to as
__________.
A. stream of consciousness
B. magical realism
C. minimalism
D. social realism
99. At the border of two countries there is a port where fishermen work. The fishermen do not speak the
same language, so they communicate using one that has been invented but only for the purpose of
trade. This scenario most accurately describes which of the following types of language?
A. a dialect
B. a creole
C. a pidgin
D. a regionalism
100. He is known as the sky and thunder god in ancient Greek religion who ruled as king of the gods
and goddesses of Mt. Olympus.
A. Hephaestus
B. Zeus
C. Poseidon
D. Hades
101. The Titanomachy was a ten-year series of battles fought in Thessaly, also known as the War of
the Titans, Battle of the Titans, Battle of Gods, or just the Titan War. Zeus freed his brothers and
sisters from their father, Cronus. This shows that the Greeks value __________.
I. bravery
II. respect
III. persistence
IV. change
A. I and II only
B. II and III only
C. I and IV only
D. II and IV only
102. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance, it was commonly described as a symbol of purity and grace,
which could only be captured by a virgin.
A. troll
B. dragon
C. kappa
D. unicorns
103. He was a fearless warrior and king who one day saw the emptiness of his life and turned his back
on it, becoming a wanderer and sadhu. He refused to return to the world that is why he is often
alluded to as having refused the responsibility.
A. King Minus
B. King Muchukanda
C. King Rama
D. Jason
104. The story of Cupid and Psyche depicts the undying and devotion. What was Psyche’s mistake
that according to Cupid was a betrayal?
A. Psyche got infatuated with Zeus.
B. Psyche believed her sister’s persuasion that her lover was an ugly beast and would kill her.
C. Psyche disobeyed her husband when she enlightened his face in the middle of the night.
D. Psyche left the house without her husband’s permission.
105. Anthropomorphism is the attribution of a human form, human characteristics, or human behavior
to nonhuman things, e.g. deities in mythology and animals in children’s stories. What trait is this?
A. anthropomorphic
B. ethereal
C. god-like
D. anthropocentrism
106. Philippine mythology and superstitions are very diverse. It includes a collection of tales and
superstitions about magical creatures and entities like __________.
A. kapre, aswang, matruculan, dwende, tiyanak, etc.
B. sirena, syokoy, etc.
C. cherubs, guardian angels, etc.
D. Malakas at Maganda, etc.
107. In Greek mythology, she was the most beautiful woman in the world. A daughter of the god Zeus,
she is best known for the part she played in causing the Trojan War. Some scholars suggest that she
was also a very ancient goddess associated with trees and birds.
A. Penelope, queen of Ithaca
B. Persephone, queen of the Underworld
C. Helen of Troy
D. Hera, queen of Olympus
108. When Paris abducted Helen of Troy, all the Greek princes were bound by the oath to help
Menelaus recover Helen. Athena and Hera who were not chosen by Paris sided with the Greeks who
sent one thousand ships to Troy. What does this indicate?
A. Serious decisions have serious consequences.
B. Paris was wrong in choosing Aphrodite as winner.
C. Hera and Athena harbored ill feelings.
D. Zeus ordered the goddesses to take side in the war.
109. He was the son of Zeus and Leto, twin brother of Artemis. He was the god of music, and he was
often depicted playing a golden lyre. He was also known as the Archer, far-shooting with a silver
bow; the god of healing, giving the science of medicine to man; the god of light; and the god of truth.
A. Mars
B. Neptune
C. Jupiter
D. Apollo
110. Which of the following is the best description of traditional phonics instruction?
A. Students study lists of high-frequency words in order to increase reading speed and
comprehension.
B. Students are taught individual letter sounds and the rules in combining the sounds together to
make words.
C. Students are immersed in written language and are encouraged to decode entire words using
context clues.
D. Students analyze patterns of organization and syntax as a way of learning to recognize
common structures.
111. A student is conducting a research project and has learned of a website that may have useful
information. The domain extension for the site is.org. Which of the following assumptions about the
website is correct?
A. All of the information on the site is current.
B. The site has been evaluated for bias.
C. The site might belong to a non-profit agency.
D. The author of the site is well-respected in his or her field.
112. In preparation for a writing unit on short stories, a teacher presents students with several
examples of short stories and works with them to identify defining characteristics of the genre. Which
of the following best describes this instructional strategy?
A. conferencing
B. discipline-based inquiry
C. self-regulated strategy development
D. introduction-body-conclusion strategy
113. In a holistic evaluation of student essays, evaluations are made on the basis of __________.
A. overall number and variety of errors made by each student
B. overall number of sentences, length, and complexity demonstrated in each essay
C. overall ability of each student to communicate in a variety of discourse modes
D. overall quality of each student’s essay in relation to the topic
A. Feminist Criticism
B. Psychoanalytic Theory
C. Reader-Response Criticism
D. Romantic Theory
A. Deconstruction
B. Psychoanalytic Theory
C. Reader-Response Criticism
D. Marxist Literary Theory
117. If the teacher uses only basal readers for teaching her students to read, she most likely believes in
__________.
A. primarily a whole language approach
B. primarily in phonics approach
C. mixture of a whole language and phonics
D. individualized reading instruction
118. A parent walks into a classroom and sees the children in groups, each gathered around a poster
board. The children are writing ideas on the poster board in what looks like graffiti (writing on walls)
to the parent. When the parent asks the teacher what the children are doing, the teacher is likely to
explain that __________.
A. this is playtime, and the children need playtime because recess has been taken out of the
program
B. the children are involved in brainstorming, which is part of the prewriting stage of the writing
process
C. invented spelling and graffiti type expression are important to the child’s development
D. the children are creating final versions of posters to be displayed in the school fair
119. Each of the following is an effective strategy for a teacher who is facilitating a whole-class
discussion EXCEPT __________.
A. having the students sit in a circle instead of traditional rows
B. breaking the class into smaller discussion groups before concluding the whole-class
discussion
C. pausing and allowing silence to promote student participation
D. ensuring that all questions require simple-sentence answers
120. Which of the following activities will best help a teacher collect data that will inform instruction
to meet the individual needs of students?
A. concentric circles
B. K-W-L chart
C. book pass
D. reciprocal reasoning