In 20 years of teaching middle grades ELA in North Carolina, I have seen the same pattern on 7th grade EOG results: students who read well and write competently still miss reading assessment questions at a rate that does not match their classroom performance. The disconnect is almost always vocabulary. Not reading ability. Not comprehension. The academic language that test items use to frame what they are asking creates a barrier that classroom instruction does not always address directly.
The full NC EOG spiral review system
Every standard, every passage type, grades 5 through 8, no prep required.
Get this resource on TPT →Seventh grade is where EOG vocabulary demands increase significantly. Terms like "rhetoric," "analogy," "allegory," and "bias" appear in test items alongside complex passages, and students have to access the meaning of the term and apply it to a specific text simultaneously, under timed conditions. Research on vocabulary acquisition is clear: single-exposure instruction does not produce the kind of durable, automatic recall that testing demands. Students need multiple meaningful encounters with each term across different formats.
These word games are designed for the six weeks before the EOG when students already know the concepts but need the vocabulary to become automatic. Four formats, 25 terms, zero prep. A student who has scrambled and un-scrambled "counterargument" twice that week will not freeze when it appears in a test item. That is the whole point.