300-Question Practice Exam Oklahoma Commission
for Teacher Preparation | 2026/2027 Update
Section 1: Reading & Literacy (Questions 1-60)
1. A teacher is working with a student who struggles to identify individual
sounds in spoken words. The student has difficulty with:
A) Phonemic awareness
B) Phonics
C) Fluency
D) Comprehension
Answer: A – Phonemic awareness is the ability to hear, identify, and
manipulate individual sounds (phonemes) in spoken words. This is a
foundational skill for reading development.
2. Which of the following best describes the alphabetic principle?
A) The understanding that spoken words are made up of individual sounds
B) The understanding that letters represent sounds and that these sounds
can be blended to form words
C) The ability to read text quickly and accurately
D) The ability to understand the meaning of what is read
Answer: B – The alphabetic principle is the understanding that letters
represent sounds (grapheme-phoneme correspondence) and that these
sounds can be blended to form words.
3. A student reads the word "cat" as "cuh-a-tuh." The teacher should work
with the student on:
,A) Blending sounds
B) Segmenting sounds
C) Rhyming
D) Syllabication
Answer: A – The student is able to identify individual sounds but struggles to
blend them together to form the word. Blending is the skill of combining
individual phonemes to say a word.
4. Which phonics rule explains why the "e" in "cake" is silent and makes the
"a" say its long sound?
A) Consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) rule
B) Consonant-vowel-consonant-e (CVCe) rule (silent e rule)
C) Vowel team rule
D) R-controlled vowel rule
Answer: B – The CVCe (silent e) rule states that when a word ends with a
consonant-vowel-consonant-e pattern, the first vowel says its long sound
and the final e is silent.
5. A student reads "boat" as "bow-at." The teacher should explicitly teach:
A) Consonant blends
B) Vowel digraphs (two vowels together that make one sound)
C) R-controlled vowels
D) Diphthongs
Answer: B – "oa" is a vowel digraph where two vowels together make one
sound (the long o sound). The student is incorrectly segmenting the vowels.
6. Which of the following is an example of a consonant blend?
A) "sh" in "ship"
,B) "ch" in "chip"
C) "th" in "thin"
D) "bl" in "blue"
Answer: D – A consonant blend (e.g., bl, br, cl, cr, dr, fl, fr, gl, gr, pl, pr, sc,
sk, sl, sm, sn, sp, st, sw, tr, tw) has two or three consonants that are blended
together but each consonant keeps its own sound. "sh," "ch," and "th" are
digraphs (two letters making one new sound).
7. A student reads "the" as "thee" (with a long e sound). This is an error in
recognizing:
A) A high-frequency word
B) A decodable word
C) A multisyllabic word
D) A compound word
Answer: A – "The" is a high-frequency (sight) word that does not follow
regular phonics rules. It should be recognized automatically, not decoded.
8. A second-grade student reads 80 words per minute with 95% accuracy.
The teacher should focus instruction on:
A) Phonemic awareness
B) Phonics
C) Fluency
D) Vocabulary
Answer: C – The student has adequate accuracy (95%) but is below the
expected reading rate for second grade (typically 80-100 wpm is average).
Fluency instruction (repeated reading, choral reading, reader's theater) is
indicated.
, 9. Which of the following strategies is most effective for building reading
fluency?
A) Silent independent reading
B) Repeated reading of a passage with feedback
C) Completing vocabulary worksheets
D) Listening to audiobooks
Answer: B – Repeated reading with feedback (e.g., the teacher modeling and
the student practicing) is one of the most effective strategies for improving
reading fluency.
10. A student reads a passage and can Answer literal questions but struggles
with inferential questions. The teacher should explicitly teach:
A) Decoding strategies
B) Comprehension monitoring
C) Making inferences (using text clues + background knowledge)
D) Summarization
Answer: C – Inferential comprehension requires the reader to "read between
the lines" by combining text clues with their own background knowledge.
This skill must be explicitly taught.
11. Which of the following is the best example of a "think-aloud" strategy?
A) The teacher asks students to write a summary
B) The teacher reads aloud and verbalizes her thoughts about the text (e.g.,
"I'm confused here, let me reread," "This makes me think of...")
C) The teacher asks students to raise their hands if they have a question
D) The teacher gives a vocabulary quiz