What a Language Arts exit ticket must capture in 5 items
After a Grade 6 nonfiction mini-lesson on text structure, the final five minutes should confirm if students can actually identify how the day’s article was built, not summarize its topic. A good Language Arts exit ticket aims at one skill with surgical prompts. For structure, ask for the pattern (cause/effect, problem/solution), the signal words that triggered that call, and a short evidence reference: “Which line best supports your answer?” For vocabulary-in-context, include one item with two plausible meanings and require students to choose based on the surrounding clause. For author’s purpose, center the wording on verbs the class uses (to inform, to argue, to entertain) and require a supporting phrase from the text.
Keep stems short: under 20 words for Grades 3–5, under 28 for Grades 6–8. Avoid prompts that invite open essays; you do not have time to read them at the bell. Draft the set inside ClassPods so the exit ticket is generated to the right length, then refine distractors to reflect mistakes your students actually make. To see the difference in a minute, open the exit ticket generator on any recent passage you used.