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Haladyna, Thomas – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2022
The use of multiple-choice items for classroom testing is firmly established for many good reasons. The content any unit or course of study can be well sampled. Test scores can be reliable (trusted). And time spent administering and scoring can be minimized. This article provides a current review of best practices in the design and use of a…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Testing, Student Evaluation, Recall (Psychology)
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Teneqexhi, Romeo; Kuneshka, Loreta; Naço, Adrian – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2018
Organizing exams or competitions with multiple choice questions and assessment by technology today is something that happens in many educational institutions around the world. These kinds of exams or tests as a rule are done by answering questions in a so-called answer sheet form. In this form, each student or participant in the exam is obliged to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Competition, Multiple Choice Tests, Computer Assisted Testing
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Teneqexhi, Romeo; Qirko, Margarita; Sharko, Genci; Vrapi, Fatmir; Kuneshka, Loreta – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2017
Exams assessment is one of the most tedious work for university teachers all over the world. Multiple choice theses make exams assessment a little bit easier, but the teacher cannot prepare more than 3-4 variants; in this case, the possibility of students for cheating from one another becomes a risk for "objective assessment outcome." On…
Descriptors: Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Test Items, Test Construction
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Gorbunova, Tatiana N. – European Journal of Contemporary Education, 2017
The subject of the research is to build methodologies to evaluate the student knowledge by testing. The author points to the importance of feedback about the mastering level in the learning process. Testing is considered as a tool. The object of the study is to create the test system models for defence practice problems. Special attention is paid…
Descriptors: Testing, Evaluation Methods, Feedback (Response), Simulation
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Haro, Elizabeth K.; Haro, Luis S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
The multiple-choice question (MCQ) is the foundation of knowledge assessment in K-12, higher education, and standardized entrance exams (including the GRE, MCAT, and DAT). However, standard MCQ exams are limited with respect to the types of questions that can be asked when there are only five choices. MCQs offering additional choices more…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Coding, Scoring Rubrics, Test Scoring Machines
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Dueck, Myron – Educational Leadership, 2011
Dueck recounts how, as a high school history teacher, he began to allow students to retake all or part of their end-of-unit tests. Influenced by the work of Rick Stiggins, Dueck prepared students for tests better by focusing on three questions Stiggins says students should be able to answer for themselves: Where am I going in this unit?, Where am…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Evaluation, Scores
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Banks, Kathleen – Educational Assessment, 2009
The purpose of this article is to describe and demonstrate a three-step process of using differential distractor functioning (DDF) in a post hoc analysis to understand sources of differential item functioning (DIF) in multiple-choice testing. The process is demonstrated on two multiple-choice tests that used complex alternatives (e.g., "No…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Multiple Choice Tests, Testing, Gender Differences
Sawchuk, Stephen – Education Week, 2009
No matter where teachers, state officials, and testing experts stand on the debate about school accountability, they generally agree that the United States' current multiple-choice-dominated Kinder-12 tests are, to use language borrowed from the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act, "in need of improvement." Now, federal officials are…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, State Officials, Testing, Cognitive Psychology
Livingston, Samuel A. – Educational Testing Service, 2009
To many people, standardized testing means multiple-choice testing. However, some tests contain questions that require the test taker to produce the answer, rather than simply choosing it from a list. The required response can be as simple as the writing of a single word as complex as the design of a laboratory experiment to test a scientific…
Descriptors: Testing, Standardized Tests, Multiple Choice Tests, Laboratory Experiments
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Tucker, Bill – Educational Leadership, 2009
New technology-enabled assessments offer the potential to understand more than just whether a student answered a test question right or wrong. Using multiple forms of media that enable both visual and graphical representations, these assessments present complex, multistep problems for students to solve and collect detailed information about an…
Descriptors: Research and Development, Problem Solving, Student Characteristics, Information Technology
Tauber, Robert T. – 1984
A technique is described for reducing the incidence of cheating on multiple choice exams. One form of the test is used and each item is assigned multiple numbers. Depending upon the instructions given to the class, some students will use the first of each pair of numbers to determine where to place their responses on a separate answer sheet, while…
Descriptors: Answer Sheets, Cheating, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
Noble, John W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1980
Describes a program in which a computer is used to store test items and to construct tests for algebra and geometry classes. (IRT)
Descriptors: Computers, Mathematics Instruction, Multiple Choice Tests, Secondary Education
Bracey, Gerald W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1987
Contends that measurement-driven instruction (MDI) has numerous interrelated and pernicious effects on curriculum, instruction, and learning. Shows that MDI fragments, narrows, deflects, and trivializes the learning experience and furthers the teacher-dominated classroom. Successful response to a set of questions does not equal understanding.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies, Measurement, Multiple Choice Tests
Popham, W. James – Phi Delta Kappan, 1987
Counters Gerald Bracey's rejection of measurement-driven instruction (MDI), especially the latter's "cursed trinity": fragmentation, deflection, and trivialization. Points to eminently successful modes of MDI and urges educators to emulate them. (MLH)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies, Measurement, Multiple Choice Tests
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Friedman, Miriam; And Others – Medical Teacher, 1987
Test performances of sophomore medical students on a pretest and final exam (under guessing and no-guessing instructions) were compared. Discouraging random guessing produced test information with improved test reliability and less distortion of item difficulty. More able examinees were less compliant than less able examinees. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Medical Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Student Evaluation
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