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Peer reviewedFriedman, Miriam; And Others – Medical Teacher, 1987
Test performances of sophomore medical students on a pretest and final exam (under guessing and no-guessing instructions) were compared. Discouraging random guessing produced test information with improved test reliability and less distortion of item difficulty. More able examinees were less compliant than less able examinees. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Medical Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Student Evaluation
Peer reviewedLane, David S., Jr.; And Others – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1987
The effects of statistical and cognitive difficulty ordering of test items, gender, and explicit labeling of item type on college students' test performance were assessed. A total of 137 male and 265 female undergraduates were administered two 40-item multiple choice tests. Results indicate significant effects for gender and use of labels, but…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Difficulty Level, Item Analysis, Multiple Choice Tests
Peer reviewedZeidner, Moshe – Journal of Educational Research, 1987
Israeli student attitudes toward teacher-made essay versus multiple-choice exams were compared using 174 junior high school students initially and then partially replicated with 101 seventh and eighth grade students. The significance of the results for test construction are discussed, and suggestions are made regarding applications of test…
Descriptors: Essay Tests, Foreign Countries, Junior High Schools, Multiple Choice Tests
Peer reviewedZimmerman, Donald W. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1985
A computer program simulated guessing on multiple-choice test items and calculated deviation IQ's from observed scores which contained a guessing component. Extensive variability in deviation IQ's due entirely to chance was found. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Error of Measurement, Guessing (Tests), Intelligence Quotient
Peer reviewedFriedman, Herbert – Teaching of Psychology, 1987
Students were allowed to offset a poor examination grade by taking a second, equivalent exam. The repeat exam provided immediate reward for using the initial exam as a study guide. Students who took two or three repeat exams scored higher on the final exam than those who took fewer repeats. There was no "curving" of the exam scores. (Author/JDH)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Educational Psychology, Educational Testing, Higher Education
Peer reviewedWilcox, Rand R. – Psychometrika, 1983
A procedure for determining the reliability of an examinee knowing k out of n possible multiple choice items given his or her performance on those items is presented. Also, a scoring procedure for determining which items an examinee knows is presented. (Author/JKS)
Descriptors: Item Analysis, Latent Trait Theory, Measurement Techniques, Multiple Choice Tests
Peer reviewedHanna, Gerald S. – Journal of Educational Research, 1976
In this study posttest performance resulting from total feedback, partial feedback, and no feedback in a multiple-choice test was compared. (RC)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Feedback, Grade 5, Grade 6
Vacc, Nicholas A.; Loesch, Larry C.; Lubik, Ruth E. – 2001
Multiple choice tests are widely viewed as the most effective and objective means of assessment. Item development is the central component of creating an effective test, but test developers often do not have the background in item development. This document describes recall, application, and analysis, the three cognitive levels of test items. It…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Evaluation, Item Analysis, Measures (Individuals)
Peer reviewedWilliams, S. Irene; Jones, Chancey O. – Mathematics Teacher, 1974
Some examples of how students read test items are presented. The results of interviews with students who have taken a multiple-choice test indicate that they do not always solve problems on the test the way we think they do. (JP)
Descriptors: Educational Testing, Mathematics Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Secondary School Mathematics
Peer reviewedRamos, Robert A.; Stern, June – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1973
The purpose of the present study was to determine whether a "natural" four-alternative multiple choice item represents the same psychological task as a five-choice item rescored as a four-choice item. (Author)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Language Tests, Measurement, Multiple Choice Tests
Peer reviewedKulhavy, Raymond W.; Anderson, Richard C. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1972
Evidence from the present study indicates that the delay-retention effect is due primarily to the forgetting of interference-producing errors during the delay interval and, secondarily, to the increased time a subject spends studying the feedback after a delay. (Authors)
Descriptors: Feedback, High School Students, Intervals, Multiple Choice Tests
Peer reviewedForbes, Duncan – English Language Teaching, 1973
Critical evaluation of testing programs as a language barrier in English courses in African educational systems. (RS)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Language Instruction, Multiple Choice Tests, Program Evaluation
Peer reviewedBoard, Cynthia; Whitney, Douglas R. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 1972
For the principles studied here, poor item-writing practices serve to obscure (or attentuate) differences between good and poor students. (Authors)
Descriptors: College Students, Item Analysis, Multiple Choice Tests, Test Construction
Peer reviewedCopeland, David A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1972
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Evaluation, Multiple Choice Tests
Peer reviewedPyrczak, Fred – Reading Research Quarterly, 1972
Descriptors: Item Analysis, Multiple Choice Tests, Reading Comprehension, Reading Research


