[go: up one dir, main page]

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views3 pages

Comp7 Sept Exam 1st Set

1. The document is a test from San Agustin Academy in Bohol, Philippines for a first quarter computer education exam. It contains multiple choice questions, identification questions, and a table completion activity testing knowledge of important figures and inventions in the history of computing. 2. The test covers topics like early computer pioneers like Charles Babbage, Ada Loing, Herman Hollerith, and inventions like the Analytical Engine, Difference Engine, Jacquard Loom, and more. 3. The exam has 3 sections testing different skills and knowledge relating to the history and basics of computing through 20th century pioneers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views3 pages

Comp7 Sept Exam 1st Set

1. The document is a test from San Agustin Academy in Bohol, Philippines for a first quarter computer education exam. It contains multiple choice questions, identification questions, and a table completion activity testing knowledge of important figures and inventions in the history of computing. 2. The test covers topics like early computer pioneers like Charles Babbage, Ada Loing, Herman Hollerith, and inventions like the Analytical Engine, Difference Engine, Jacquard Loom, and more. 3. The exam has 3 sections testing different skills and knowledge relating to the history and basics of computing through 20th century pioneers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

SAN AGUSTIN ACADEMY

Panglao, Bohol
6340 PHILIPPINES
Member: Bohol Association of Catholic Schools (BACS) – Diocese of Tagbilaran
Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP)

FIRST OFFICE EXAMINATION IN COMPUTER EDUCATION 7


(1st Quarter) Test I - ___/20
Name: ______________________________________ Date: ______________________ Test II- ___/20
Grade & Section: _____________________________ Score: _____________________ Test III- ___/20
Test IV- ___/10
TEST I. MULTIPLE CHOICE
Direction: Read each statement carefully and encircle the letter of the best answer.
1. It refers to the piece of computer hardware used to input text, characters, and other Total- ___ /70

commands into a computer or similar device


a. computer b. CPU c. computer keyboard d. typewriter
2. It plays an enormous role in today's society, that gives an impact on communication, medicine, science, and etc.
a. computer b. CPU c. computer keyboard d. typewriter
3. Known as Countess of Lovelace who is an English mathematician and writer, and chiefly recognized for her
work on Charles Babbage's proposed mechanical general-purpose computer.
a. Charles Babbage c. Herman Hollerith
b. Joseph-Marie Jacquard d. Augusta Ada King
4. He was a German-American statistician, inventor, and businessman who developed the electromechanical
tabulating machine for punched cards to assist in summarizing information and later, in accounting.
a. Charles Babbage c. Herman Hollerith
b. Joseph-Marie Jacquard d. Augusta Ada King
5. She was considered as the first computer programmer who wrote the first program while translating a paper on
Babbage's Analytical Engine from French into English.
a. Charles Babbage c. Herman Hollerith
b. Joseph-Marie Jacquard d. Augusta Ada King
6. He was a French weaver and merchant who played an important role in the development of the earliest
programmable loom.
a. Charles Babbage c. Herman Hollerith
b. Joseph-Marie Jacquard d. Augusta Ada King
7. He was a French inventor of the Jacquard loom who served as the impetus for the technological revolution of
the textile industry and is the basis of the modern automatic loom.
a. Charles Babbage c. Herman Hollerith
b. Joseph-Marie Jacquard d. Augusta Ada King
8. He is the inventor of the analytical and difference engine.
a. Charles Babbage c. Herman Hollerith
b. Joseph-Marie Jacquard d. Augusta Ada King
9. A Swedish lawyer, translator, and inventor who designed the world's first printing calculator.
a. Edvard Scheutz b. Per Georg Scheutz c. Alan Mathison Turing d. Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse
10. He was a computer designer who was recruited to the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in London to create
an electronic computer.
a. Edvard Scheutz b. Per Georg Scheutz c. Alan Mathison Turing d. Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse
11. He was a British scientist and mathematician who presented the principle of a universal machine in which his
design for the Automatic Computing Engine (ACE) was the first complete specification of an electronic stored-
program all-purpose digital computer.
a. Edvard Scheutz b. Per Georg Scheutz c. Alan Mathison Turing d. Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse
12. The MIT invented and built the Differential Analyzer, the first large-scale automatic general-purpose
mechanical analog computer, according to Stanford University. What does MIT stand for?
a. Massachusetts Institute of Technology c. Massachusetts Industry Technological
b. Massachusetts Industry Technology d. Massachusetts Institute of Technological
13. He constructed the Scheutzian calculation engine with his father based on Charles Babbage's difference
engine.
a. Edvard Scheutz b. Per Georg Scheutz c. Alan Mathison Turing d. Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse
14. He was a German civil engineer, pioneering computer scientist, inventor, and businessman whose greatest
achievement was the world's first programmable computer.
a. Edvard Scheutz b. Per Georg Scheutz c. Alan Mathison Turing d. Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse
15. It is a product founded by Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard in 1939.
a. digital computer b. Turing-complete Z3 c. audio oscillator d. programmable loom
16. Utilizing this object is different from using a typewriter, though they look similar. It is less tiresome to use this
compared to a typewriter since we do not have to punch its keys as hard as we do with typewriter keys.
a. computer b. CPU c. computer keyboard d. typewriter
17. Which of the following does not belong to the group?
a. main keypad b. computer keypad c. numeric keypad d. function keys
18. Where can we find the main keys in a computer keyboard?
a. main keypad b. computer keypad c. numeric keypad d. function keys
19. It is a set of keys that include punctuation marks and special keys like the enter or carriage return key, caps
lock key, and spacebar key.
a. main keypad b. computer keypad c. numeric keypad d. function keys
20. It is a set of keys that include the digits 0 – 9, a period or decimal point, arithmetic operation keys, and the
enter key that also serves as the equal sign in computations.
a. main keypad b. computer keypad c. numeric keypad d. function keys
TEST II. IDENTIFICATION
Direction: Identify the following.
_______________ 1. It is strictly a calculators which cannot be used for general arithmetical calculation.
_______________ 2. It is a Victorian-era computer designed by Charles Babb age.
_______________ 3. It is designed to break the complex Lorenz ciphers used by the Nazis during World War II.
_______________ 4. It was founded by Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard in 1939.
_______________ 5. The first customer of Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard in their audio oscillator product.
_______________ 6. It is a machine that is capable of computing anything that is computable.
_______________ 7. He is best known for being credited with inventing the first electronic digital computer in the
1930s at Iowa State College.
_______________ 8. Most historians believe that the use of this machine significantly shortened the war by
providing evidence of enemy intentions and beliefs.
_______________ 9. It is much more than a calculator and marks the progression from the mechanized
arithmetic of calculation to fully-fledged general-purpose computation.
_______________ 10. It is a room-sized, relay-based calculator which produced mathematical tables but was
soon superseded by electronic stored-program computers.
_______________ 11. It is a machine that is significant for being the first to compute tabular differences and print
the results.
_______________ 12. It is a machine invented in 1837 and finalized in 1843 which was constructed by Per
Georg Scheutz with his son Edvard Scheutz.
_______________ 13. An individual who is considered as the first computer programmer.
_______________ 14. It is much more than a calculator and marks the progression from the mechanized
arithmetic of calculation to fully-fledged general-purpose computation.
_______________ 15. It is a type of automatic mechanical calculators that are designed or developed to
calculate or tabulate the polynomial function.
_______________ 16. This pertains to the first six letters in the row just before the numbers.
_______________17. It is a set of keys located on the rightmost side of the keyboard.
_______________ 18. How many sections does a computer keyboard have?
_______________ 19. It is a continent that uses AZERTY or QWERTZ computer keyboard pattern.
_______________ 20. It is a key found in a keyboard that serves as the equal sign in computations.
TEST III. TABLE COMPLETION
Direction: Complete the table and choose your answer from the given choices in the box. (2 points each)
Audio Oscillator Colossus Computer John Vincent Atanasoff
Herman Hollerith Augusta Ada King Charles Babbage
Jacquard Loom Automatic Computing Engine
Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse Scheutzian Calculation Engine

PROPONENT or INVENTOR PRODUCT or INVENTION


1. Joseph-Marie Jacquard
2. Analytical Engine and Difference Engine
3. First Computer Program
4. Per Georg Scheutz
5. Electromechanical Tabulating Machine
6. Alan Mathison Turing
7. David Packard And Bill Hewlett
8. Functional Program-Controlled Turing-Complete Z3
9. First Electronic Digital Computer
10. Tommy Flowers

TEST IV. VENN DIAGRAM


Direction: Using a Venn diagram, compare and contrast analytical and difference engine. Provide two
differences of analytical engine and difference engine and one similarity of the two engines. (2 points each)

Prepared by:
HAZEL JOY A. LUSELLA, LPT
PARENT’S/GUARDIAN’S SIGNATURE OVER PRINTED NAME Subject Teacher

You might also like