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Haladyna, Thomas M. – IDEA Center, Inc., 2018
Writing multiple-choice test items to measure student learning in higher education is a challenge. Based on extensive scholarly research and experience, the author describes various item formats, offers guidelines for creating these items, and provides many examples of both good and bad test items. He also suggests some shortcuts for developing…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Multiple Choice Tests, Test Items, Higher Education

Toppino, Thomas C.; Brochin, H. Ann – Journal of Educational Research, 1989
Study findings indicate that exposure to a statement on a true-false test increased college students' (N=64) tendency to believe the statement was true, regardless of whether the statement actually was true or false. In contrast to previous research, these findings support existence of a negative suggestion effect for true-false exams. (IAH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Learning Processes, Objective Tests, Test Format
Carstens, Paul W.; McKeag, Robert A. – 1982
This study utilized a test, re-test procedure to investigate what effects a change in the order, or sequence, of test items would have on student performance. College juniors (n=102) were given a 50-item multiple-choice and matching item test on the general subject of educational measurement. The items had no particular sequence, but had simply…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Objective Tests, Performance Factors, Scores

Bardo, J.W.; Yeager, S.J. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1982
In examining response style effects on various commonly used fixed-response formats, Likert-type formats were relatively consistently affected regardless of the number of format categories. Nonanchored numbers were less affected. Across types, strong correlations for the linear formats and human faces made their use problematic. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Objective Tests, Response Style (Tests), Student Reaction

Kolstad, Rosemarie K.; And Others – Educational Research Quarterly, 1983
Complex multiple choice (CMC) items are frequently used to test knowledge about repetitive information. In two independent comparisons, performance on the CMC items surpassed that of the multiple true-false clusters. Data indicate that performance on CMC items is inflated, and distractors on CMC items fail to prevent guessing. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Objective Tests

Twigg, Helen Parramore – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1981
Examines students' amusing responses to essay test questions, while maintaining that such responses can still give a teacher a better indication of what students are learning in the classroom than can objective tests. (HTH)
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Essay Tests, Higher Education, Objective Tests
Schuldberg, David – 1988
Indices were constructed to measure individual differences in the effects of the automated testing format and repeated testing on Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) responses. Two types of instability measures were studied within a data set from the responses of 150 undergraduate students who took a computer-administered and…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Assisted Testing, Higher Education, Individual Differences

Goolkasian, Paula; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1979
Recognition memory for sentences from a classroom lecture was tested as a function of lecture instructions, length of retention interval, and item type. With immediate testing, subjects differentiated original sentences from reworded and inferential statements similar in meaning. Only inferences were recognized as not having been presented after…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Lecture Method, Memory, Objective Tests
Ellington, Henry – 1987
The first of three sequels to the booklet "Student Assessment," this booklet begins by describing and providing examples of four different forms that objective questions can take: (1) conventional multiple choice questions; (2) true/false questions; (3) assertion/reason items; and (4) matching items. Guidance is offered on how to decide which type…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Instructional Material Evaluation, Objective Tests

Frisbie, David A.; Becker, Douglas F. – Applied Measurement in Education, 1990
Seventeen educational measurement textbooks were reviewed to analyze current perceptions regarding true-false achievement testing. A synthesis of the rules for item writing is presented, and the purported advantages and disadvantages of the true-false format derived from those texts are reviewed. (TJH)
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Higher Education, Methods Courses, Objective Tests
Wiggers, Thomas – Educational Computer, 1982
Describes the modification of an already existing computer-assisted testing system at the University of Mississippi School of Health Related Professions to include test questions of the matching variety. (JJD)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Oriented Programs, Electronic Equipment, Higher Education
Thiede, Keith W.; And Others – 1991
A correlational analysis was performed to examine the relationship between recognition and recall test formats. A total of 236 college students completed one of four 80-item general knowledge tests; the forms contained 20 items of each of four formats: (1) true; (2) false; (3) multiple-choice; and (4) free response. Ninety-three of the subjects…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Comparative Testing, Correlation

Kolstad, Rosemarie K.; Kolstad, Robert A. – Educational Research Quarterly, 1989
The effect on examinee performance of the rule that multiple-choice (MC) test items require the acceptance of 1 choice was examined for 106 dental students presented with choices in MC and multiple true-false formats. MC items force examinees to select one choice, which causes artificial acceptance of correct/incorrect choices. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Testing, Dental Students, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
Anderson, Paul S.; Alexander, Diane – 1986
The Multi-Digit (MDT) testing procedure is a computer-scored testing innovation conceptualized in 1982. It is fully compatible with multiple choice and true/false tests well suited for the testing of discreet terms and concepts such as in fill-in-the-blank examinations. The student reads the question and selects the appropriate response from an…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Computer Software, Criminal Law, Higher Education
Sax, Gilbert; Reiter, Pauline B. – 1980
Despite the popularity of both multiple-choice (MC) and true-false (TF) items, most investigations comparing the two formats have done so to determine the optimum number of choices to be given to students within a given time period. The purpose of this investigation was to compare the reliabilities and the validities of both formats when the items…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Correlation, Higher Education, Item Analysis