Unit No. 4 Types of Tests
Unit No. 4 Types of Tests
Unit No. 4 Types of Tests
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Types of Tests
Introduction
✗ Classroom tests play a central role in the assessment of
student learning.
✗ Tests provide relevant measures of many important learning
outcomes and indirect evidence concerning others.
✗ They make expected learning outcomes explicit to students
and parents and show what types of performance are valued.
✗ The validity of the information they provide, however,
depends on the care that goes into the planning and
preparation of tests.
✗ The main goal of classroom testing is to obtain valid, reliable
and useful information.
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Objectives
After reading this unit, you will be able to:
define the nature of selection and supply type time items.
examine the role, advantages and disadvantages of different
types of objective and subjective type tests for measuring the
students’ achievement.
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Multiple choice selection
✗ Multiple-choice test items consist of a stem or a question and three or more alternative
✗ answers (options) with the correct answer sometimes called the keyed response and the
✗ incorrect answers called distracters.
✗ Student selects a single response from a list of options. It can be used effectively for
any level of course outcome. It consists of two parts: the stem, which states the problem
and a list of three to five alternatives, one of which is the correct (key) answer and the
others are distracters
✗ (incorrect options that draw the less knowledgeable pupil away from the correct
✗ response).
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Direct Question
Which is the capital city of Pakistan? --------------- (Stem)
A. Paris. --------------------------------------- (Distracter) B.
Lisbon. -------------------------------------- (Distracter) C.
Islamabad. ---------------------------------- (Key) D. Rome.
--------------------------------------- (Distracter)
Incomplete statement:
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MCQS
✗ Multiple choice questions are composed of one question with multiple possible
answers (options), including the correct answer and several incorrect answers
(distracters).
✗ Typically, students select the correct answer by circling the associated number or
letter, or filling in the associated circle on the machine-readable response sheet.
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Multiple Choice Questions Good for:
1.Examine only the 2. Use Simple Language! 3. Make the Questions
Important Facts! Brief and Clear!
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Multiple Choice Questions Good for:
7. Avoid Asking Negative 8. Avoid Distracters in the
Questions! Form of "All the answers
are correct" or "None of the
Answers is Correct"!
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Advantages
Multiple-choice test items are not a panacea.
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Advantages
They are adaptable to various levels of learning outcomes, from simple recall of
knowledge to more complex levels, such as the student’s ability to:
• Analyze phenomena
• Apply principles to new situations
• Comprehend concepts and principles
• Discriminate between fact and opinion
• Interpret cause-and-effect relationships
• Interpret charts and graphs
• Judge the relevance of information
• Make inferences from given data
• Solve problems
Multiple-choice items are amenable to item analysis, which enables the teacher to
improve the item by replacing distracters that are not functioning properly. In addition,
the distracters chosen by the student may be used to diagnose misconceptions of the
student or weaknesses in the teacher’s instruction.
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Validity
In general, it takes much longer to respond to an essay test
question than it does to respond to a multiple-choice test
item, since the composing and recording of an essay answer
is such a slow process. A student is therefore able to answer
many multiple-choice items in time it would take to answer a
single essay question. This feature enables the teacher using
multiple-choice items to test a broader sample of course
contents in a given amount of testing time. Consequently, the
test scores will likely be more representative of the students’
overall achievement in the course.
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reliability
Well-written multiple-choice test items compare
favorably with other test item types on the issue of
reliability. They are less susceptible to guessing than are
true-false test items, and therefore capable of producing
more reliable scores. Their scoring is more clear-cut than
short answer test item scoring because there are no
misspelled or partial answers to deal with.
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Efficiency
Multiple-choice items are amenable to rapid scoring,
which is often done by scoring machines. This expedites
the reporting of test results to the student so that any
follow-up clarification of instruction may be done before
the course has proceeded much further. Essay questions,
on the other hand, must be graded manually, one at a
time. Overall multiple choice tests are:
Very effective
Versatile at all levels
Minimum of writing for student
Guessing reduced
Can cover broad range of content
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Disadvantages
Since the student selects a response from a list of alternatives
rather than supplying or constructing a response, multiple-
choice test items are not adaptable to measuring certain
learning outcomes, such as the student’s ability to:
• Articulate explanations
• Display thought processes
• Furnish information
• Organize personal thoughts.
Perform a specific task
• Produce original ideas
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True/false Questions
A True-False test item requires the student to determine
whether a statement is true or false. The chief advantage
of this type is the opportunity for successful guessing.
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Example
Circle the correct response to the following statements.
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Good for
Knowledge level content
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Advantages
Easily assess verbal knowledge
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Disadvantages
They are easy to construct.
It is difficult to discriminate between students that
know the material and students who don't know.
Students have a 50-50 chance of getting the right
answer by guessing.
Need a large number of items for high reliability.
Fifty percent guessing factor.
Assess lower order thinking skills.
Poor representative of students learning achievement.
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Tips for Writing Good True/False
items:
Avoid double negatives.
Avoid long/complex sentences.
Use specific determinants with caution: never, only,
all, none, always, could, might, can, may, sometimes,
generally, some, few
Use only one central idea in each item.
Don't emphasize the trivial.
Use exact quantitative language
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Tips for Writing Good True/False
items:
Don't lift items straight from the book.
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Thanks!
Any questions?
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