3 TSETBUS
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RICA
Credentialing
Reading Instruction Competence Assessment
CALIFORNIA
E N S U R I N G E D U C AT O R E X C E L L E N C E
RICA Subtest 3 — Multiple Choice Practice Examination
P L A N N I N G · A SS E SS M E N T · D I F F E R E N T I AT I O N · I N ST R U C T I O N A L D E L I V E R Y · C A S E ST U DY A N A LYS I S
INSTITUTION California Commission on Teacher EXAM CODE RICA Subtest 3
Credentialing
PROGRAM Multiple Subject / Single Subject ACADEMIC YEAR
Teaching Credential
EXAM TITLE RICA Subtest 3 — Multiple Choice TOTAL QUESTIONS 30 Questions
Practice
CONTENT DOMAINS Planning, Assessment, Differentiation, FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best
Instructional Delivery Answer
EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each question.
▸ Questions address RICA Subtest 3 competencies: planning, assessment, differentiation, and instructional delivery.
▸ Correct answers and detailed rationales appear below each question for comprehensive review.
SECTION I — PLANNING, ORGANIZING & MANAGING READING Questions 1 –
INSTRUCTION 10
1. A sixth grader advanced in most reading areas has difficulty completing assigned reading selections due to
attention issues. What is the teacher's best initial strategy?
A. Adapt assignments to reduce complexity and cognitive challenge
B. Tell the student grades will be based partly on improved concentration
C. Break down assignments into small steps and help the student monitor his own attention and progress
D. Manage assignments so the student only has one to work on at any given time
CORRECT ANSWER C — Break down assignments into small steps and help him monitor his own attention and progress
RATIONALE The student is motivated and capable but struggles with sustained attention. Teaching self-regulation
strategies — chunking tasks and monitoring progress — addresses the executive function deficit while
building independence. Reducing complexity (A) lowers expectations for a student who is advanced; external
motivation (B) does not build skills.
, 2. When creating lesson plans to promote specific reading skills, a teacher should make sure that:
A. Each activity strengthens two or more specific reading skills
B. The targeted reading skills relate to an appropriate instructional progression and reflect students' needs
C. Each activity connects reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills
D. The targeted skills are grade-appropriate and taught to all students using the same methods
CORRECT ANSWER B — The targeted reading skills relate to an appropriate instructional progression and reflect students'
needs
RATIONALE Effective lesson planning follows a developmental progression where skills build on prerequisites and are
informed by assessment data showing what students actually need. Teaching should be responsive and
sequential — starting with what students know and building from there — not uniform for all learners (D) or
arbitrarily combining multiple skills (A).
3. When interpreting reading assessment results for a particular student, which question is most important?
A. How did the student's performance compare with classmates?
B. Are these findings sufficient to assign a grade?
C. How do these findings relate to the student's performance on other recently administered reading assessments?
D. Do these findings provide information about national norms ranking?
CORRECT ANSWER C — How do these findings relate to performance on other recently administered reading
assessments?
RATIONALE No single assessment tells the complete story. Triangulating data from multiple sources provides a more
accurate and complete picture. The key question is whether this result is consistent with other evidence of the
student's reading ability or an outlier requiring further investigation.
4. Midway through the year, a second-grade success team meets to plan support for a student below grade level.
What information is most important for the teacher to communicate?
A. A comparison of the student's skills with grade-level peers
B. A list of every formal and informal assessment the student has taken
C. A list of appropriate formal assessments for summative evaluation
D. A description of the student's assessed strengths and weaknesses as a foundation for addressing needs
CORRECT ANSWER D — A description of assessed strengths and weaknesses as a foundation for addressing needs
RATIONALE Strengths-based reporting starts with what the student can do and builds from there. By identifying both
strengths and needs, the team can leverage existing skills to address gaps. A list of assessments (B) without
analysis or a comparison to peers (A) without context provides data but no actionable insight.