A. Multiple Choice ____/12 Read the questions carefully and choose the best answer. (2 pts each)
B. Fill in the Blanks (2 pts each) ____/14Choose the correct answers in the blanks below. 1. Please Select pedestrian pedestrien pidestrian * is someone who is walking, and a Please Select strange stranger strangar * is a person you don’t know.2. I should open the door Please Select closest nearby farthest * to the Please Select curb carb cerb * or sidewalk when I get out of the car.3. Please Select hydrate hydrated hydrating * means drinking enough water to keep us healthy.4. The first thing I do when I get in the car is Please Select fast fasten fasen *my Please Select seatbag seatbeg seatbelt *
C. Identification ____/14Look at the Image and choose the correct meaning of each sign. (2 pts each)
D. Questions and Answers ____/30Read each question carefully and select the best answer to the question. (3 pts each)
E. Sequence (2 pts each) _____/10Fill in the blank with the correct word and rearrange the Sequence in the correct order by the letter.
Walking Safety
a. I always hold my parent's ________ when I cross the streets. b. When we cross the street, we go to the _______ and cross at the crosswalk. c. At the traffic light, we look at the lights facing _____. d. When the light turns green, I look left, right, and ______ again.
F. Reading Comprehension ____/20Read the article and write the correct answer on the line. (2 pts each) What one person needs and wants may be different from the needs and wants of another person. When people live together in a family or even in a city, these different needs and wants can lead to conflicts. To make living together easier, good manners have developed over the years. Good manners are ways of treating people so that people feel better about themselves and about each other, and so that conflicts don’t become serious. When someone does something for us or gives us something, saying “thank you” is good manners. When we hurt someone, saying “I’m sorry” is also good manners. It’s good manners to say “excuse me” if we pass very closely in front of someone, if we need to get another person’s attention, or if we burp in front of someone else. Good manners, then, can be found in saying “thank you” “I’m sorry”, and “excuse me,” but good manners are more than words. Good manners are also actions. When we give someone else our seat on a crowded bus, when we wait our turn, when we walk on the right-hand side of the mall or sidewalk, when we knock before opening the closed door of a room, those things show good manners. When we meet someone for the first time, it’s good manners to smile and say “hello” and give our name. When people come to our house, it’s good manners to greet them with a smile when they come, and to say something like “thank you for coming” when they go home. Sometimes, good manners can be the things we don’t do. When we don’t talk with a full mouth, or interrupt, or cut into a line, that is showing good manners. When we don’t try to get the attention of someone on the telephone, that’s good manners, too. If we use good manners, we make getting along more pleasant for everyone.