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English Grade 10

The Class 10 course is designed to focus on integrated reading, writing, and vocabulary-building skills. The primary topics of the course are reading comprehension strategies, grammar fundamentals, vocabulary building, and essay writing. Each lesson is a blend of reading passages, grammar exercises, vocabulary enhancement, and essay drafting and revision. The curriculum aims to help students learn the essential skills of writing, reading comprehension, and building a rich vocabulary. The course materials are challenging and designed to help students develop effective learning strategies that will be useful in their elementary and middle school education, preparing them to succeed in high school. The writing instruction emphasizes paragraphing principles and strategies to enhance the writing skills of the students. The course is an essential step in the students' academic preparation.

The course also focuses on reading comprehension strategies, with particular emphasis on non-fiction passages. Instruction topics include the following:
• Making predictions while reading;
• Reading strategies using visualization;
• Asking questions before, during & after reading;
• Clarifying while reading;
• Making inferences;
• Identifying evidence in a text;
• Paraphrasing, comparing, and contrasting;
• Identifying sequences of events;
• Difference between fact and opinion;
• Identifying cause-and-effect relationships;
• Identifying passage’s main idea and author' purpose.

This is a sample of Reading Comprehension from this course
Reading paragraph ;- A Funny Old Ballpark
Have you ever seen a baseball stadium with a hill in it? In Nashville, Tennessee, there used to be a ballpark called Sulphur Dell. It was one of the strangest ballparks in history.
In most ballparks, the right field fence is about 330 feet from home plate. In Sulphur Dell, it was only 262 feet—which made it very easy to hit home runs, if you hit the ball to just the right spot. That's pretty odd, but not half as weird as the hill in the outfield. It sloped up in front of the right field fence, until it got to about twenty‐two feet high!
Skip Nipper, a historian who wrote about Sulphur Dell in his book Baseball in Nashville, calls the stadium "quirky." He likes to tell a story about a player named Phil Weintraub, who had some trouble with the outfield hill in 1934.
"A hard line drive came his way," says Nipper, "and he ran down the hill and reached down to catch the ball and missed it. It went between his legs. He turned around, went up the hill to catch it, and once again it went between his legs. When he finally got it, he threw it over the third baseman's head."
In baseball, when a player makes a mistake, he's charged with an "error." It's pretty bad if a player makes more than one error in a game, but on that play, Phil Weintraub made three!
A lot of great players came through Sulphur Dell, including Bill Dickey, Honus Wagner, and the sultan of swat himself: Babe Ruth. When Ruth came to town, the whole city was excited. The state Senate even made a special resolution, allowing them to leave the Capitol early so they could all go to the game. Back then, you couldn't watch players on TV, and they didn't want to miss their chance to see Babe Ruth. Ruth was in the outfield when he played there in 1934, Nipper says, and "almost broke one of his legs" running on it.
But even though the ballplayers didn't like hills, the people of Nashville loved their ballpark. They called it "the Dell." Nipper started going to games at the Dell when he was a child. His father would take him, and so would his grandfather.
"My dad would take me and my cousin or my brother," he says, "and we would sit on the first base side, so we could see that right field hill. And my grandfather would not let us go to the concession stand until the seventh‐inning stretch. He wanted us to watch the game."
One of the greatest games ever played at the Dell was on July 11, 1916. A pitcher named Tom Rogers was on the mound for the Tennessee Volunteers. They called him Shotgun Rogers, because he threw the ball so fast. That night, he pitched better than he ever had. He did something that's only happened a few dozen times in all of baseball history: he threw a perfect game. That means that, in nine innings of play, nobody on the opposing team got a hit. Nobody got a walk. Nobody even got to first base!
By 1963, the old ballpark wasn't so popular anymore. Teams stopped playing baseball there, and eventually tore it down. But in 1978, a new team came to town: the Nashville Sounds. They built themselves a brand new ballpark called Greer Stadium. A lot of famous players have played there: Don Mattingly, Ryan Braun, Rick Ankiel—even Michael Jordan, when he was playing baseball.
Sulphur Dell had been around for almost 100 years when they tore it down. Greer Stadium probably won't last that long. The city is now building a brand new ballpark for the Sounds. The new ballpark will be located right beside the state Capitol, on a spot of land called Sulphur Dell.
Where does Skip Nipper think they should build the new stadium? He doesn't care.
"I'm a baseball fan," he says. "I'm going to go wherever they play.”

In this Reading Comprehension you will get the multiple-choice questions (MCQ) and Answer solution type questions.

A sample of MCQ type question on this RC.

Based on the information in the passage, how did baseball fans feel about Sulphur Dell?
A Baseball fans hated Sulphur Dell and almost never went to games there.
B Baseball fans loved Sulphur Dell and were excited about going to games there.
C Baseball fans did not care much about Sulphur Dell one way or the other.
D Baseball fans did not like Sulphur Dell at first but started liking it more in the 1960s.
Answer ;- B.

Question/Answer type question on this RC.

Que;- Was Sulphur Dell a good place or a bad place for baseball games? Explain your answer using evidence from the story.
Suggested answer: Answers may vary, provided that they are supported by the passage. Students may argue that Sulphur Dell was a good place for a baseball game, citing such reasons as the ease of hitting home runs and the multitude of baseball greats who played there. Those arguing that Sulphur Dell was a bad place for a baseball game might cite such reasons as the difficulties the outfield caused players like Phil Weintraub and Babe Ruth.