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Victoria Crisp; Sylvia Vitello; Abdullah Ali Khan; Heather Mahy; Sarah Hughes – Research Matters, 2025
This research set out to enhance our understanding of the exam techniques and types of written annotations or markings that learners may wish to use to support their thinking when taking digital multiple-choice exams. Additionally, we aimed to further explore issues around the factors that contribute to learners writing less rough work and…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Test Format, Multiple Choice Tests, Notetaking
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Abdullah Al Fraidan; Meznah Saud Abdulaziz Alsubaie – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background: This study examines the effect of test anxiety on the academic performance of postgraduate female students, focusing on their perceptions and experiences in open-book exams (OBE) and closed-book exams (CBE). Method: A qualitative case study design was employed using the Thinking Aloud Protocol (TAP) to collect data from five Saudi…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, Vocabulary, Females, Books
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Clack, Alice; Dommett, Eleanor J. – Education Sciences, 2021
Student Approaches to Learning (SAL) have been the focus of much research, typically linking different approaches, e.g., surface and deep, to different assessment types. However, much of the previous research has not considered the different conditions under which different types of assessment occur and the different types of feedback they…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Questionnaires, Undergraduate Students, Feedback (Response)
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Sato, Brian K.; He, Wenliang; Warschauer, Mark; Kadandale, Pavan – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2015
Undergraduate biology education is often viewed as being focused on memorization rather than development of students' critical-thinking abilities. We speculated that open-note testing would be an easily implemented change that would emphasize higher-order thinking. As open-note testing is not commonly used in the biological sciences and the…
Descriptors: Science Education, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Biology
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Kiewra, Kenneth A. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1983
No differences in immediate recognition performance were found for 30 undergraduate students who reorganized notes into an instructor-generated matrix versus subjects who reviewed in their typical manner. Reorganization during review resulted in relatively higher achievement on a free recall test, while unstructured review produced higher…
Descriptors: Cues, Encoding (Psychology), Higher Education, Notetaking
Katayama, Andrew D.; Crooks, Steven M.; Nelson, Charles E. – 1999
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the effects of notetaking on achievement while studying electronic text. In the first experiment, 83 students studied 1 of 3 sets of notes (partial, skeletal, and control) for the effects on posttest performance (on fact, structure, and transfer tests). No differences were found between groups on the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Higher Education
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Kardash, CarolAnne M.; Kroeker, Tirza L. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1989
The effects of varying placement of a review period and test expectancy on students' notetaking, review strategies, and performance on delayed free recall, application, and cloze tests were studied for 156 undergraduates. The benefits of reviewing notes and optimal placement of the review period partly depended on the test type. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cloze Procedure, Higher Education, Learning Strategies