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Updated October 2024
All grade 10 students are required to write the OSSLT. Students must complete the literacy requirement to graduate.
All grade 10 students and other eligilble writers will write the OSSLT during period 2 this fall. The JFR testing window is November 5-26.
The newest version of the OSSLT is 100% digital. You will complete all sections online, on a school chrome book, over two separate 75 minute sessions.
Practice materials are available here. They are an excellent preview of the actual test!
Please direct any questions to Ms. Aalbers, head of literacy and Teacher-Librarian at John F. Ross: waalbers@ugcloud.ca
Information posted below relates to the pen and paper OSSLT, written prior to 2020. While formatting of the 2024-25 OSSLT remains reflective of the exercises listed below, be advised that the current test is written online. The only long piece of writing now required on the OSSLT is a series of paragraphs. Students read and respond to a news report, but are no longer required to write one. Practice materials for the online version are available here.
UGDSB Literacy Web Site – so many great resources here!
Literacy Slideshow from assembly on Oct. 23, 2019.
Acing the OSSLT – slideshow offering tips and info about data generated after mock test.
Thanks to the St. Mary’s High School Student Success Team – Carol DeVrieze, David DiGiuseppe, Karen Drummond, Brandon Haynes and Jamie Rodrigue – for creating many of these materials and allowing us to use their work!
Practice Tests
practice test – booklet 1 – questions and answers
practice test – booklet 2 – questions and answers
practice test – booklet 1 – video feedback
practice test – booklet 2 – video feedback
practice test – booklet 1 – slideshow feedback
practice test – booklet 2 – slideshow feedback
Additional Practice Lessons at John F. Ross
Opinion Essay – link to a Google doc
Short Answer Questions – link to a Google doc
Multiple Choice Questions – link to a Google doc
Remediation Resources
Multiple Choice
Short Answers
Opinion Piece
Still More Resources and Tips
Overview
General Tips
Multiple Choice Questions
Short Answer Questions
News Report
Series of Paragraphs
Grammar
The following materials are sections of the Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test that have been released by EQAO to assist students in preparing for the literacy test. They are examples of the actual questions and tasks used in previous years.
Released OSSLT Materials – examples of actual questions from previous test booklets:
By Year: 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015
2017
2017 – question booklet
Multiple Choice (Content)
Short Answer (Content)
Multiple Choice (Grammar)
Short Answer (Open Response)
News Report
Multiple Choice (Content)
Short Answer (Content)
2017 – blank answer booklet
2017 – multiple choice answers
2017 – scoring rubrics and sample student responses
2016
2016 – question booklet
Series of Paragraphs
Multiple Choice (Grammar)
Multiple Choice (Content)
Multiple Choice (Content)
Short Answer (Content)
Short Answer (Open Response)
Multiple Choice (Content) – Reading Redacted Due to Copyright
2016 – blank answer booklet
2016 – multiple choice answers
2016 – scoring rubric and sample student responses
2015
2015 – question booklet
Multiple Choice (Content)
Short Answer (Content)
Multiple Choice (Grammar)
Short Answer (Open Response)
News Report
Multiple Choice (Content)
Short Answer (Content)
2015 – blank answer booklet
2015 – multiple choice answers
2015 – scoring rubric and sample student responses
2014
2014 – question booklet
Series of Paragraphs
Multiple Choice (Grammar)
Multiple Choice (Content)
Multiple Choice (Content)
Short Answer (Content)
Short Answer (Open Response)
Multiple Choice (Graphic Text)
2014 – blank answer booklet
2014 – multiple choice answers
2014 – scoring rubric and sample student responses
All Students: Extra Time
All students will be provided extra time to complete the test if it is needed.
ESL Students
ESL students write the test when they are ready, usually after they have completed ESL EO.
Students with IEPs
Students with IEPs are routinely provided with accommodations in classrooms, the resource room, and for evaluations, to allow them better access to the curriculum. The list below reflects accommodations that apply for the OSSLT that appear on some IEPs.
Access to computer for written work – The student can use a computer in the classroom or resource room for tasks like tests, exams, and culminating tasks. Computer use would include access to assistive technologies, like text to speech or speech to text, where appropriate.
Allow for frequent breaks – During assessment tasks, students have the opportunity to take a break from the work and go for a short (often supervised) walk, or get up from the desk and stretch. This allows students to refocus on their work.
Extra time to respond (EQAO) – Extra time is defined as double time. If the test is designed to take 1 hour, the accommodated student would have up to 2 hours.
Read all written instructions – Students with poor reading comprehension benefit from having instructions read to them as they write tests, exams or complete culminating tasks. Instructions may be read by a classroom teacher, EA, or resource teacher.
Read all written instructions except for tests of reading (EQAO) – When reading comprehension is being assessed, reading written instructions is not permitted. When other skills are being assessed, such as grammar conventions, writing or mathematics, instructions may be read.
Scribe (EQAO) – A scribe writes down exactly what the student says in response to each question or task. During evaluations, scribes do not prompt or assist the student in any other way. Scribing helps students with strong verbal skills but weak written output to complete tasks and fully demonstrate their thinking.
Access to Kurzweil/Dragon/Word Q/Inspiration/etc for language-heavy assessments – If students make regular use of assistive technology for help with language, the specific programs that they use will be listed on their IEPs.
Exemptions
Only students who are not working towards an Ontario Secondary School Diploma are exempt from writing the test.