Free Year 7 Ideas and viewpoints in literary te... Practice | Skillo
Year 7 students facing their third NAPLAN need to be confident with ideas and viewpoints in literary texts. Identify and explore ideas, points of view, characters, events and/or issues in literary texts, drawn from historical, social and/or cultural contexts, by First Nations Australian, and wide-ranging Australian and world authors. Skillo has targeted practice questions for this exact skill, mapped to the Australian Curriculum v9.0, free and ready to go.
Start Free Practice →What is tested: Ideas and viewpoints in literary texts
- ✓Identify and explore ideas, points of view, characters, events and/or issues in literary texts, drawn from historical, social and/or cultural contexts, by First Nations Australian, and wide-ranging Australian and world authors.
- ✓Questions are based on original Australian passages
- ✓Text types include narrative, informative and persuasive
Sample questions
Question 1 — Easy
Read the passage below, then answer the question. The Kimberley region in north-western Western Australia is one of the most geologically ancient landscapes on Earth. Its distinctive orange-red rock formations, sculpted over billions of years, contain some of the oldest exposed rock on the planet. The region is also home to the Bungle Bungle Range, a series of beehive-shaped sandstone towers whose existence was largely unknown to non-Indigenous Australians until the 1980s. Today, the Purnululu National Park, which encompasses the Bungle Bungle Range, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, recognised for its outstanding geological and biological significance. The passage suggests that the Bungle Bungle Range's relative obscurity before the 1980s was most likely due to —
Answer: Option D is correct — The passage implies the formations were unknown to non-Indigenous Australians by noting they were 'largely unknown' — and the Kimberley's description as an ancient, remote landscape strongly suggests geographical isolation is the reason.
Question 2 — Medium
Read the passage below, then answer the question. When sixteen-year-old Zara won the regional science fair, she expected congratulations. Instead, her mentor Dr Okafor handed her a list of flaws in her methodology. 'A prize tells you where you stand today,' he said quietly, 'but it tells you nothing about where you could stand tomorrow.' Zara was stung by his words at first, refusing to open the list for two days. When she finally did, she found not criticism but a detailed map of every question her project had failed to answer. By the time she submitted her revised paper, she barely recognised her original work — and she was glad. What does Dr Okafor's comment about the prize most likely suggest about his beliefs?
Answer: Option D is correct — Dr Okafor's remark contrasts where a prize places you 'today' with where you 'could stand tomorrow', implying that growth through identifying weaknesses matters more than external recognition.
Question 3 — Hard
Read the passage below, then answer the question. The passenger pigeon was once the most abundant bird in North America, with flocks so vast they darkened the sky for hours as they passed overhead. Within a century of European settlement, the species was extinct. Hunting provided much of the immediate cause, but habitat destruction played an equally critical role by eliminating the vast forest areas the birds needed to breed successfully. The last known passenger pigeon, a female named Martha, died in Cincinnati Zoo in 1914. Her story is frequently cited in conservation literature as evidence that abundance alone offers no protection against extinction. What lesson does the author suggest should be drawn from the passenger pigeon's extinction?
Answer: Option D is correct because the passage directly states that "abundance alone offers no protection against extinction," showing that even enormous populations can collapse when threats like hunting and habitat loss go unmanaged. Option C is incorrect because the passage says both hunting and habitat destruction played equally critical roles, not that hunting is always worse.
How to use Skillo for Year 7 Reading
- Select Year 7 and Reading on the home screen
- Use Quick Practice — questions on ideas and viewpoints in literary texts will appear as part of the session
- Check the Skill Breakdown on your profile to track your accuracy on ideas and viewpoints in literary texts specifically
- Review explanations after each question to understand the reasoning behind correct answers
Skillo is free, requires no email or account details, and is built specifically for Australian students. Every question is mapped to the Australian Curriculum v9.0 and filtered by skill so your child practises exactly what they need.
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