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Taking Objective Tests |
Objective
tests measure your ability to remember many facts and figures as
well as your understanding of the course materials. These tests
are often designed to make you think independently - do not
count on recognizing the right answer ; instead prepare
yourself for high level critical reasoning and making fine
discriminations to determine the best answer.
The most common objective test questions are multiple-choice,
true-false, and matching items. Doing well on these questions
requires that you not only master the information but also
interpret the test-maker's intentions. You know you have mastered
the information if you can:
- Recall specific
terms, facts, names, and other key words; become proficient in the
language of the course.
- Distinguish the
ways in which ideas, facts, theories, or other observations differ
from each other AND categorize ideas, facts, theories or other
observations according to the ways these are similar.
- Answer the
questions and solve the problems in the text and create
your own questions or problems.
- I.
HOW TO PREPARE FOR OBJECTIVE TESTS
- Review notes
and text(s) - list the major concepts that have been
covered
- Highlight
those topics that were stressed. Note why they were
stressed.
- Think
vocabulary. Every field of study has its own vocabulary.
Identify words/terms used to represent specific concepts (i.e.,
the word 'paradigm' in a social science research course) and
treat them as you would a foreign language - make flash cards
for frequent drills, and try to use these words
whenever you work with course-related materials.
- Compare and
contrast. Sometimes objective questions can be used to test
your ability to distinguish concepts, ideas, theories, events,
or facts from each other. Construct diagrams, charts, tables,
or lists to summarize relationships.
- Recite for
precision. Review your retention of the information by
recalling it often. Use odd moments, in addition to 15-20
minute review sessions, to say or write out complete ideas,
facts. It is very important to verbalize the recalled
information completely and in a detailed manner so that you
will have a precise idea of your mastery of the
material.
- II.
HOW TO TAKE OBJECTIVE TESTS
- General
tips.
- Plan your
time. Allow more time for high point value questions;
reserve time at the end to review your work, and for
emergencies.
- Before
starting the test, turn it over and jot down all the facts
and details you are trying to keep current in
memory.
- Look the
whole test over, skimming the quesitons and developing a
general plan for your work. If any immediate thoughts come
to you, jot them down in the margin
- Check with
your instructor whether or not you can write on the
test.
- Read the
directions very carefully. Look for time limits, specific
answering procedures (i.e., answer 3 out of the 4 questions
below), how questions will be graded.
- Start with
the section of the test that will yield the most points, but
begin working with the easiest questions to gain time for
the more difficult ones and to warm up.
- Work
quickly, check your timing regularly, and adjust your speed
when necessary.
- Avoid
reading into the question. When you find yourself thinking
along the lines of "this is too easy; there must be a
trick..." mark the question and move on to another. When you
begin modifying the question, the answer you will come up
with will be different from the one on the teacher's key.
Interpret questions literally.
- Choose the
answer the testmaker intended - stay within the scope of the
course. If you know facts that are beyond the level of
sophistication of the test, 1) Record the intended answer,
and 2) point out the possible ambiguity and make a case for
a different answer either in the margin of the test or
during the next regular class.
- Mark key
words in every question. To help find the key works ask
yourself WHAT, WHO, WHERE, WHEN, and HOW?
- Multiple
choice questions.
- Probably
the most commonly used objective questions, multiple choice
questions, consist of 2 parts:
- The stem
- the statement or question.
- The
choices - also known as the distractors. There are
usually 3 to 5 options from which you choose the one that
will complete the stem statement or question.You are to
select the correct choice, the option that completes the
thought expressed in the stem. There is a 20% chance that
you will guess the correct choice if there are 5 choices
listed. Although multiple choice questions are are most
often used to test your memory of details, facts, and
relationships, they are also used to test your
comprehension and your ability to solve problems.
Reasoning ability is a very important skill for doing
will on multiple choice tests.
- Read the
stem as if it were an independent, free standing statement.
Anticipate the phrase that would complete the thought
expressed, then evaluate each answer choice against
your anticipated answer. It is important that you read each
choice, even if the first choice matches the answer you
anticipated, because there may be a better answer
listed.
- Another
evaluation technique is to read the stem together with each
answer choice as if it were a true-false statement. If the
answer makes the statement a false one, cross it out. Check
all the choices that complete the stem as a true statement.
Try to suspend judgment about the choices you think are true
until you have read all the choices.
- Beware of
words like not, but, except . Mark these words
because they specify the direction and limits of the
answer.
- Also watch
out for words like always, never, and only
. These must be interpreted as meaning all of the time,
not just 99% of the time. These choices are frequently
incorrect because there are few statements that have no
exceptions (but there are a few).
- If there
are two or more options that could be the correct answer,
compare them to each other to determine the differences
between them, and then relate these differences with the
stem to deduce which of the choices is the better one.
(Hint: Select the option that gives the most complete
information.)
- If there is
an encompassing answer choice, for example "all of the
above", and you are unable to determine that there are at
least two correct choices, select the encompassing
choice.
- Use hints
from questions you know to answer questions you do
not.
- Make
educated guesses - eliminate options any way you
can.
- True-False
Questions.
- Also a
popular question type, the true-flase question has only two
options. Your odds are always 50-50 with this type of item.
Typically, testmakers tend to focus on details in true-false
questions.
- In order
for a statement to be true, it must be so 100% of the time.
This means each part of the question. Thus you must evaluate
the trueness of WHAT,WHO, WHERE, WHEN, and HOW for each
statement.
- Beware of
words that qualify and give specific meanings. Words like
some, usually, not frequently denote true
statements, but be careful to interpret each statement as a
special case.
- Another
type of word, such as always and never ,
should be interpreted as meaning without exception. If you
can think of an exception, the statement is
false.
- Testmakers
often mismatch items or names with inappropriate events or
definintions to test your mastery and alertness.
- Matching
Questions.
- Matching
questions give you some opportunity for guessing. You must
know the information well in that you are presented with two
columns of items for which you must establish relationships.
If only one match is allowed per item, then once items
become eliminated, a few of the latter ones may be
guessed.
- The
relationship is the crucial factor in a set of matching
items. Usually the relationship is common to all included
items. For example, all the items in Column B define the
terms in Column A, or the individuals named in Column A
wrote the books listed in Column B.
- For every
match you make, cross the the items in both columns
(unless there is more than one match possible).
- Begin with
the lengthier column containing the information, evaluating
the items in the column with shorter descriptions for a
match. This way you save time by not constantly having to
re-read the lengthy statements.
- III.
ANALYZING RETURNED OBJECTIVE TESTS
- After
you get your graded test back, analyze the questions. If you do
not get your test back, visit your professor in his/her office
where the test will be kept on file and ask for your graded
answer sheet to analyze your performance on the
test.
- Read all
comments and suggestions.
- Loof for the
origin of the questions. Did they come from the notes or the
book(s)? From the class or the lab?
- Look at the
questions you missed. Verbalize the rationale for the correct
answer - figure out why the correct answer was better than your
answer.
- Did you really
know the answer to a question, but you failed to read it
carefully enough to recognize it?
- Were there any
areas tested you failed to prepare for? Why didn't
you?
- Did you
misread any questions?
- Check the
level of difficulty or the level of detail of the test
questions. Were most of the questions over precise details, or
were they over main ideas and principle? Did most of the
questions come straight from the material covered, or did the
testmaker expect you to be able to analyze and/or evaluate the
information?
- Were you able
to finish the test?
- Did you have a
difficult time during the test because you were too anxious to
focus on the questions?
