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ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T practice questions

ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T practice questions

Use Skill Align for ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T practice questions and exercise questions after the relevant skill or text work has been taught. Students can start with the pathway demo, then practise by topic and mode.

32 practice skills

ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T includes 32 practice skills across Bridging Literacy reading and writing, EAL language and texts, English T analytical response, Essential English practical communication, and Integrated EAL-English response.

Australian Years 7-12 Exercise and test mode Parent-managed access

What is a practice skill?

A practice skill is a focused topic or question type designed to help students practise one curriculum-aligned concept with instant feedback and explanations. Skill Align uses practice skills to organise questions by year level, subject, strand, and curriculum focus.

Sample ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T questions

These sample questions are visible on the page before login. They show ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T main idea, inference, vocabulary in context, cohesion, tone, and clear written expression explanations before opening the demo.

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T Main idea hard text

1. In a ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T transcript about a Canberra light-rail consultation post used for EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T, the speaker explains that public planning in EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T affects everyday routines. What is the main idea?

Choices
  • public planning in EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T is presented as an everyday community issue, not only a background topic.
  • The speaker is only listing unrelated facts.
  • The transcript is mainly about grammar rules.
  • The setting is described as completely unimportant.
Explanation:

The strongest answer captures the whole message of the transcript rather than one small detail.

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T Inference hard text

2. A speaker in a ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T listening transcript says, 'I used to hurry past the survey map in the EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T sample; now I stop and read the notice.' What can be inferred?

Choices
  • The speaker's attitude has shifted from indifference to attention.
  • The speaker has forgotten where the notice is.
  • The speaker dislikes every part of the community.
  • The speaker is describing an unrelated weather event.
Explanation:

The contrast between hurrying past and stopping shows a change in attitude.

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T Vocabulary in context hard text

3. In a ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T article, public planning in EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T is described as 'pressing' for local students. What does 'pressing' most nearly mean here?

Choices
  • Urgent
  • Decorative
  • Finished
  • Optional
Explanation:

In this context, pressing means needing attention soon.

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T Cohesion hard text

4. A paragraph about a Canberra light-rail consultation post used for EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T begins, 'This change affects travel, cost and time. These pressures are not felt equally.' What does 'These pressures' refer to?

Choices
  • The combined effects on travel, cost and time
  • Only the word time
  • A new person who has not been mentioned
  • The title of the article
Explanation:

The pronoun group points back to the three effects named in the previous sentence.

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T Tone hard text

5. A ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T notice for local students says, 'Please bring your questions; the plan is still open to change.' What tone is created?

Choices
  • Consultative
  • Threatening
  • Sarcastic
  • Secretive
Explanation:

The invitation to ask questions and the openness to change create a cooperative, consultative tone.

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T Written expression hard text

6. A student responding to a ACT Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T prompt needs one clear sentence explaining why the survey map in the EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T sample is important. Which sentence is best?

Choices
  • the survey map in the EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T sample is important because it makes the wider issue of public planning in EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T visible in a single local detail.
  • the survey map in the EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T sample is there and it is thing in the text.
  • This is important because I said it is important.
  • There are many words and the topic is a topic.
Explanation:

The sentence gives a clear reason and connects the detail to the wider issue.

For parents comparing ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T support

ACT BSSS Year 11 EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T practice should help students move from first impressions to evidence-based reading, language choices, and controlled written response. These examples preview main idea, inference, vocabulary in context, cohesion, tone, and clear written expression before the no-login EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T demo.

Continue with Skill Align

Ready to continue? Use the normal Skill Align pages below to preview questions, check full curriculum coverage, or compare pricing before deciding whether to sign up.

What this practice and exercise page covers

EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T practice sits inside ACT BSSS Year 11 English planning coverage across English T, Essential English, Literature T, EAL, integrated English courses, analytical reading, language choices, context, argument, and written response skills, with Skill Align keeping the route focused on the selected English pathway.

Senior practice is organised by pathway, unit, topic, and mode so students can revise targeted areas rather than sitting a full-paper workflow every time. Skill Align treats practice questions and exercise questions as the same learning workflow: students answer curriculum-aligned questions, review explanations, and move between exercise mode and test mode.

Start with the public sample questions to check the question style, then use the curriculum coverage page to choose a topic that matches the student's current classwork.

Preview question styles
  • Reading and viewing: Students practise reading and viewing through short targeted questions, explanations, and mode-specific feedback.
  • Text analysis: Students practise text analysis through short targeted questions, explanations, and mode-specific feedback.
  • Argument and audience: Students practise argument and audience through short targeted questions, explanations, and mode-specific feedback.
Suggested first practice steps
  • Preview the public sample practice and exercise questions before creating a saved student session.
  • Choose one focus area that has already been introduced at school.
  • Use exercise mode for immediate explanations, then test mode when the student is ready for delayed feedback.

These examples are not the full topic list. Use the curriculum coverage page for the complete mapped pathway.

  • Reading and viewing
  • Text analysis
  • Argument and audience
  • Written response
Who it is for

ACT students studying EAL (English as Additional Language) A-T.

Common search wording
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Questions parents ask
Can students try act year 11 eal (english as additional language) a-t practice questions before subscribing?

Yes. Public sample pages let visitors preview curated Skill Align questions without creating a saved student test record.

Does Skill Align replace school lessons or tutoring?

No. Skill Align is designed for structured practice after students have learned topics at school or with a teacher.

Are practice questions and exercise questions the same on Skill Align?

Yes. Families may search for either wording; Skill Align uses one curriculum-aligned practice page for both practice questions and exercise questions.

Can parents choose only one subject?

Yes. Skill Align uses subject-based access, so families can start with the year level and subject the student needs now.

Skill Align independently prepares practice pathways aligned to publicly available curriculum and syllabus information. Official requirements should always be checked with the relevant authority.