TEST FOR TEACHER CERTIFICATION | COMPLETE
EXAM QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT ANSWERS.
OVERVIEW.
This package is designed for candidates preparing for the Michigan Test for Teacher Certification
(MTTC) Lower Elementary (PK-3) Test #117. The 100 questions mirror the content and format of
the official exam, covering the four primary subareas: Child Development and Learning (22%),
English Language Arts and Social Studies (39%), Mathematics, Science, and Health (28%), and
Visual and Performing Arts, and Physical Education (11%). Questions assess both foundational
knowledge and the application of theories, methods, and standards in early childhood and
elementary education contexts specific to Michigan's grade-level content expectations.
1. According to Piaget's theory, a kindergarten student who believes that the amount of liquid
changes when poured from a short, wide glass into a tall, narrow glass is demonstrating which
cognitive stage?
A. Sensorimotor
B. Preoperational
C. Concrete Operational
D. Formal Operational
Answer: B
Rationale: This is a classic example of centration and lack of conservation, which are hallmarks
of Piaget's Preoperational stage (ages 2-7). Children at this stage focus on one salient perceptual
feature (the height of the liquid) and cannot mentally reverse the action.
2. A second-grade teacher is planning a phonics lesson focused on vowel teams. Which of the
following word pairs is best for teaching the variant vowel team /ô/ sound spelled 'au' and 'aw'?
A. boy, toy
B. haul, saw
C. feet, seat
D. out, cow
,Answer: B
Rationale: "Haul" and "saw" correctly demonstrate the target /ô/ sound (as in caught or paw)
spelled with the vowel teams 'au' and 'aw'. This directly addresses the Michigan ELA standard
RF.2.3b on decoding vowel teams. The other pairs teach different sounds: oy/oi (A), ee/ea (C),
and ou/ow (D).
3. A first-grade teacher uses ten-frames and connecting cubes to help students understand that
the numbers 7 and 3 can be combined to make 10. This activity is primarily developing students'
understanding of:
A. Number sequencing
B. Place value
C. Number bonds
D. Geometric shapes
Answer: C
Rationale: The activity explicitly models number bonds (part-part-whole relationships), a
foundational concept for addition and subtraction fluency. Using manipulatives like ten-frames
helps students visualize and internalize these combinations to 10, a key kindergarten/first-grade
standard.
4. During a unit on community helpers, a Pre-K teacher has students role-play different jobs,
create murals, and sing related songs. This integrated approach best aligns with which principle
of effective early childhood instruction?
A. Isolated skill drills
B. Whole-child development
C. Standardized assessment
D. Teacher-directed lecture
Answer: B
Rationale: The activities address multiple domains: social-emotional (role-play), creative
(murals), and linguistic/musical (songs). This integration is a cornerstone of whole-child
development, recognizing that young children learn best through engaging, multifaceted
experiences rather than isolated, abstract drills.
,5. According to Vygotsky's sociocultural theory, which instructional strategy best supports a
child in mastering a new skill that is just beyond their current independent capability?
A. Providing worksheets for independent practice
B. Pairing the child with a more capable peer for collaborative problem-solving
C. Reducing the difficulty level to match current independent ability
D. Assigning homework to extend learning time
Answer: B
Rationale: Vygotsky's concept of the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) emphasizes learning
through social interaction with more knowledgeable others. Scaffolding within the ZPD—
through peer collaboration or guided assistance—enables children to perform tasks they cannot
yet do independently. This aligns with Michigan's emphasis on collaborative learning structures.
6. A third-grade teacher observes that a student consistently reverses the letters 'b' and 'd'
when writing. Based on developmental norms, which conclusion is most appropriate?
A. The student definitely has dyslexia and needs immediate intervention
B. This is a normal developmental pattern for some 8-year-olds that requires monitoring
C. The student has visual impairment requiring glasses
D. The student is being careless and needs behavioral consequences
Answer: B
Rationale: Letter reversals (b/d, p/q) are common in early elementary years due to the
developing visual-spatial processing and left-right discrimination. While persistent reversals
beyond age 8 may warrant screening, occasional reversals at age 8 are within normal
developmental variation. Michigan's MTTC emphasizes understanding developmental ranges
before diagnosing disabilities.
7. During a science investigation, kindergartners sort leaves by color, size, and shape. This
activity primarily addresses which science process skill?
A. Hypothesis testing
B. Classification
C. Measurement
D. Inference
, Answer: B
Rationale: Classification (grouping objects by observable properties) is a fundamental science
process skill appropriate for early learners. Michigan's Grade Level Content Expectations for
Kindergarten Science emphasize that students should be able to sort objects based on
observable physical characteristics as a precursor to more complex scientific thinking.
8. A first-grade teacher uses "think-alouds" while reading aloud to model how good readers
make predictions. This strategy primarily supports the development of:
A. Phonemic awareness
B. Metacognitive strategies
C. Fine motor skills
D. Phonics fluency
Answer: B
Rationale: Think-alouds make the invisible cognitive processes of skilled readers visible to
students, explicitly teaching metacognitive strategies—thinking about one's own thinking. This
supports Michigan's ELA standards for Reading Comprehension, which require students to
monitor their understanding and use fix-up strategies when meaning breaks down.
9. In a Pre-K classroom, a teacher provides various sized containers in the water table for
children to fill and pour. This activity primarily develops which mathematical concept?
A. Addition and subtraction algorithms
B. Conservation and volume
C. Geometric proofs
D. Multiplication tables
Answer: B
Rationale: Water play with containers allows children to explore volume and develop pre-
mathematical understandings of capacity and conservation (recognizing that amount stays
constant despite container shape). This aligns with Michigan's Early Childhood Standards of
Quality for Mathematics, which emphasize hands-on exploration of measurable attributes
before formal operations.
10. A second-grade teacher is planning a social studies unit on Michigan history. Which activity
best aligns with the GLCE for understanding how communities change over time?