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Christopher Wheatley; James Wells; John Stewart – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
The Brief Electricity and Magnetism Assessment (BEMA) is a multiple-choice instrument commonly used to measure introductory undergraduate students' conceptual understanding of electricity and magnetism. This study used a network analysis technique called modified module analysis-partial (MMA-P) to identify clusters of correlated responses, also…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Energy, Magnets, Undergraduate Students
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Badali, Sabrina; Rawson, Katherine A.; Dunlosky, John – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
Multiple-choice practice tests are beneficial for learning, and students encounter multiple-choice questions regularly. How do students regulate their use of multiple-choice practice testing? And, how effective is students' use of multiple-choice practice testing? In the current experiments, undergraduate participants practiced German-English word…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Drills (Practice), Multiple Choice Tests, Student Behavior
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David G. Schreurs; Jaclyn M. Trate; Shalini Srinivasan; Melonie A. Teichert; Cynthia J. Luxford; Jamie L. Schneider; Kristen L. Murphy – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2024
With the already widespread nature of multiple-choice assessments and the increasing popularity of answer-until-correct, it is important to have methods available for exploring the validity of these types of assessments as they are developed. This work analyzes a 20-question multiple choice assessment covering introductory undergraduate chemistry…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Test Validity, Introductory Courses, Science Tests
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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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Melanie Neumeier; Yuwaraj Narnaware – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2024
Nursing students struggle to retain enough anatomical knowledge to meet their entry to practice competencies, but what knowledge is missing and when this occurs has been previously unexplored. A cohort of 80 nursing students were given multiple choice quizzes to assess their anatomical knowledge on 11 different organ systems during their second,…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Nursing Education, Nursing Students, Retention (Psychology)
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Grace C. Tetschner; Sachin Nedungadi – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2025
Many undergraduate chemistry students hold alternate conceptions related to resonance--an important and fundamental topic of organic chemistry. To help address these alternate conceptions, an organic chemistry instructor could administer the resonance concept inventory (RCI), which is a multiple-choice assessment that was designed to identify…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, Item Response Theory, Scores
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Soderstrom, Nicholas C.; Bjork, Elizabeth Ligon – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
The current study examined whether the learning benefits of pretesting--like those produced by posttesting--generalize to classroom settings, and whether such benefits transfer to non-pretested related information. Before some lectures but not others, undergraduate students enrolled in a large research methods class were given a brief competitive…
Descriptors: Pretesting, Academic Achievement, Undergraduate Students, Research Methodology
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Walker, Joshua D.; Robinson, Daniel H. – Journal of Experimental Education, 2023
Two-stage testing (TST) involves individual testing followed by taking the same test in teams. Previously, Vogler and Robinson ("The Journal of Experimental Education," 84(4), 787-803, 2016) found that TST facilitated individual performance. The present study addressed methodological limitations in the Vogler and Robinson study in two…
Descriptors: Testing, Undergraduate Students, Test Wiseness, Repetition
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Himel Mondal; Shaikat Mondal; Amita Singh; Amita Kumari; Mohammed Jaffer Pinjar; Ayesha Juhi; Santanu Nath; Anup Kumar D. Dhanvijay; Anita Kumari; Pratima Gupta – Advances in Physiology Education, 2024
Emotional intelligence (EI) has a positive correlation with the academic performance of medical students. However, why there is a positive correlation needs further exploration. We hypothesized that the capability of answering higher-order knowledge questions (HOQs) is higher in students with higher EI. Hence, we assessed the correlation between…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Scores, Questionnaires, Medical Students
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Mehmet Kanik – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2024
ChatGPT has surged interest to cause people to look for its use in different tasks. However, before allowing it to replace humans, its capabilities should be investigated. As ChatGPT has potential for use in testing and assessment, this study aims to investigate the questions generated by ChatGPT by comparing them to those written by a course…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Testing, Multiple Choice Tests, Test Construction
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Larry Katz; Dave Carlgren; Cory Wright-Maley; Megan Hallam; Joan Forder; Danielle Milner; Lisa Finestone – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
Student-generated questions can be an effective study technique to improve active learning, metacognitive skills, and performance on examinations. Students have shown greater success when assessed using peer-made study questions than when studying without questions. In three semesters of a kinesiology research methods course students were taught…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Kinesiology, Multiple Choice Tests, Student Developed Materials
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Acikgul, Kubra; Sad, Suleyman Nihat; Altay, Bilal – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2023
This study aimed to develop a useful test to measure university students' spatial abilities validly and reliably. Following a sequential explanatory mixed methods research design, first, qualitative methods were used to develop the trial items for the test; next, the psychometric properties of the test were analyzed through quantitative methods…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Scores, Multiple Choice Tests, Test Validity
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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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Núñez-Peña, María Isabel; Bono, Roser – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2021
We examined the relationships between math anxiety, perfectionism and academic achievement in undergraduates enrolled in a course with high mathematical content. Participants were 251 students who completed math anxiety and perfectionism questionnaires, and whose academic achievement was measured via a multiple-choice examination. The number of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Anxiety, Personality Traits, Multiple Choice Tests, Academic Achievement
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Grace C. Tetschner; Sachin Nedungadi – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Resonance is a foundational organic chemistry concept, but it is consistently misunderstood by undergraduate students. The development of a concept inventory--a multiple-choice assessment where the incorrect answer choices stem from commonly held alternate conceptions--on the concept of resonance could help organic chemistry instructors quickly…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry
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