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Showing 1 to 15 of 169 results Save | Export
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Meltem Acar Güvendir; Seda Donat Bacioglu; Hasan Özgür; Sefa Uyanik; Fatmagül Gürbüz Akçay; Emre Güvendir – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2025
Different types of test items influence students' test anxiety, and physiological measures such as heart rate provide a means of measuring this anxiety. This study aimed to explore the connection between test anxiety and examination item formats. It centered on 20 junior university students in Western Türkiye. The research monitored students'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Test Anxiety, Measurement Techniques, Physiology
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Jonathan Hoseana; Andy Leonardo Louismono; Oriza Stepanus – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2025
We describe and evaluate a method to mitigate unwanted student collaborations in assessments, which we recently implemented in a second-year undergraduate mathematics module. The method requires a list of specific pairs of students to be prevented from collaborating, which we constructed based on the results of previous assessments. We converted…
Descriptors: Graphs, Color, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Students
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Susan Ramlo; Carrie Salmon; Yuan Xue – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2025
Research shows that there are multiple benefits to giving college students oral rather than written exams. However, studies that examine, describe, and differentiate how students view their oral exams were never found in a literature search. The purpose of this study was to use Q methodology [Q] to describe the divergent student views about taking…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Science Instruction, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry
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Yavuz Akbulut – European Journal of Education, 2024
The testing effect refers to the gains in learning and retention that result from taking practice tests before the final test. Understanding the conditions under which practice tests improve learning is crucial, so four experiments were conducted with a total of 438 undergraduate students in Turkey. In the first study, students who took graded…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Student Evaluation, Testing
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Rebecka Weegar; Peter Idestam-Almquist – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2024
Machine learning methods can be used to reduce the manual workload in exam grading, making it possible for teachers to spend more time on other tasks. However, when it comes to grading exams, fully eliminating manual work is not yet possible even with very accurate automated grading, as any grading mistakes could have significant consequences for…
Descriptors: Grading, Computer Assisted Testing, Introductory Courses, Computer Science Education
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Spiegel, Tali; Nivette, Amy – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2023
This study investigates the relationship between take-home (open-book) examinations (THE) and in-class (closed-book) examinations (ICE) on academic performance and student wellbeing. Two social science courses (one bachelor and one master) were included in the study. In the first cohort (2019), students from both courses performed an ICE, whereas…
Descriptors: Test Format, Tests, Academic Achievement, Retention (Psychology)
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Douglas Yeboah – Cogent Education, 2023
Computer-based test has been administered in e-learning environments as part of ICT integration in education. Recently, online test is gaining attention in both regular and distance education institutions, and students' preference or perception of an online test versus paper-based test is crucial in successful adoption or implementation of either…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Test Format, Computer Assisted Testing
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Monica Irungbam; Shailata Prisi; Ritika Shrivastava; Binita Goswami – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2024
Medical science is a dynamic field of knowledge that is constantly broadening with upcoming clinical research and analysis. Traditional medical education has been focused on textbook-based recall assessments--closed book assessment (CBA). However, the availability of newer technologies has made the accessibility to encyclopedic knowledge…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Medical Students, Tests, Conventional Instruction
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Rivers, Michelle L.; Dunlosky, John – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Prior research has investigated whether learners spontaneously adapt their encoding strategies in anticipation of particular test formats (i.e., the "encoding-strategy adaptation hypothesis"; Finley & Benjamin, 2012). However, the strongest evidence supporting this hypothesis is confounded with test experience (as argued by Cho &…
Descriptors: Expectation, Experience, Learning Strategies, Test Format
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McGuire, Michael J. – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2023
College students in a lower-division psychology course made metacognitive judgments by predicting and postdicting performance for true-false, multiple-choice, and fill-in-the-blank question sets on each of three exams. This study investigated which question format would result in the most accurate metacognitive judgments. Extending Koriat's (1997)…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Multiple Choice Tests, Accuracy, Test Format
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Lisa A. Bonner; Jalisa H. Ferguson – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2025
Condensed courses are commonly used across academia as a means for students to catch up or get ahead of their curriculum. Instructors may be hesitant to teach such courses due to concerns about limited knowledge retention and reduced academic rigor. We sought to determine if there are any differences in changes of student attitudes before and…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Barriers, Academic Standards
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Gruss, Richard; Clemons, Josh – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2023
Background: The sudden growth in online instruction due to COVID-19 restrictions has given renewed urgency to questions about remote learning that have remained unresolved. Web-based assessment software provides instructors an array of options for varying testing parameters, but the pedagogical impacts of some of these variations has yet to be…
Descriptors: Test Items, Test Format, Computer Assisted Testing, Mathematics Tests
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Ivan D. Mardini G.; Christian G. Quintero M.; César A. Viloria N.; Winston S. Percybrooks B.; Heydy S. Robles N.; Karen Villalba R. – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
Today reading comprehension is considered an essential skill in modern life, therefore, higher education students require more specific skills to understand, interpret and evaluate texts effectively. Short answer questions (SAQs) are one of the relevant and proper tools for assessing reading comprehension skills. Unlike multiple-choice questions,…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Tests, Learning Strategies, Grading
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Jeremy L. Hsu; Noelle Clark; Kate Hill; Melissa Rowland-Goldsmith – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2023
Nearly all undergraduate biology courses rely on quizzes and exams. Despite their prevalence, very little work has been done to explore how the framing of assessment questions may influence student performance and affect. Here, we conduct a quasi-random experimental study where students in different sections of the same course were given…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Biology, Science Education, Test Construction
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Carter, Kelli P.; Prevost, Luanna B. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2023
The structure and function relationship is a core concept identified by physiology faculty. Prior research has shown this may be a difficult concept for students to understand. Formative written assessments, such as short answer essay questions, allow students to demonstrate their thinking by encouraging students to use their diverse ideas to…
Descriptors: Physiology, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Formative Evaluation
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