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Gross, Leon J. – Evaluation and the Health Professions, 1982
Despite the 50 percent probability of a correctly guessed response, a multiple true-false examination should provide sufficient score variability for adequate discrimination without formula scoring. This scoring system directs examinees to respond to each item, with their scores based simply on the number of correct responses. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Guessing (Tests), Health Education, Higher Education
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Weiten, Wayne – Journal of Experimental Education, 1982
A comparison of double as opposed to single multiple-choice questions yielded significant differences in regard to item difficulty, item discrimination, and internal reliability, but not concurrent validity. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Educational Testing, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
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Kolstad, Rosemarie; And Others – Journal of Dental Education, 1982
Nonrestricted-answer, multiple-choice test items are recommended as a way of including more facts and fewer incorrect answers in test items, and they do not cue successful guessing as restricted multiple choice items can. Examination construction, scoring, and reliability are discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Higher Education, Item Analysis, Multiple Choice Tests
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Mentzer, Thomas L. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1982
Evidence of biases in the correct answers in multiple-choice test item files were found to include "all of the above" bias in which that answer was correct more than 25 percent of the time, and a bias that the longest answer was correct too frequently. Seven bias types were studied. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Educational Testing, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Psychology
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Sarnacki, Randolph E. – Evaluation and the Health Professions, 1981
Effects of Test-Wiseness (TW) training and level of TW on multiple-choice item type performance, on standardized and teacher-made examinations in undergraduate medical education were considered. Conditions inherent in standardized tests must be present before a susceptibility to the extraneous source of variance of TW is evidenced. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Medical Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Standardized Tests
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Green, Kathy; And Others – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1982
Achievement test reliability and validity as a function of ability were determined for multiple sections of a large undergraduate French class. Results did not support previous arguments that decreasing the number of options results in a more efficient test for high-level examinees, but less efficient for low-level examinees. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
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Sommerfeld, Jude T. – Chemical Engineering Education, 1981
Discusses rationale for and use of multiple choice examinations in material balances, unit operations, reactor design, and process control courses. Describes computer scoring of student reaction to, and future plans for these examinations. (SK)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Computer Assisted Testing, Engineering Education
Priestly, Michael; Nassif, Paula M. – Educational Technology, 1979
Focuses on the methods of establishing and maintaining content validity of criterion-referenced multiple-choice tests through refined item writing techniques. (Author)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Criterion Referenced Tests, Educational Objectives, Guides
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Terry, Thomas M. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1980
Compared are two approaches to exam writing in which the narrative approach is described as a novel, creative, and integrated learning opportunity. In this approach, a single system is chosen in which questions are asked that challenge the student to perceive interrelationships between principles and details previously learned. (CS)
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Course Content, Evaluation Methods
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Nevo, Baruch; Spector, Amos – Journal of Educational Research, 1979
No correlation was found between test scores and time to test completion in a study of psychology and chemistry students taking multiple-choice tests with no time restrictions. (Editor)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Students, Conceptual Tempo, Individual Differences
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Levin, Joel R.; And Others – American Educational Research Journal, 1979
Providing contextual aids to help students reduce mutual interference between two sentences was studied. When students were presented sentences in distinctive contexts, no interference was observed. An interference effect was obtained when sentences were given in either no context or a nondistinctive context. (MH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Grade 4, Grade 5
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Jodoin, Michael G. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2003
Analyzed examinee responses to conventional (multiple-choice) and innovative item formats in a computer-based testing program for item response theory (IRT) information with the three parameter and graded response models. Results for more than 3,000 adult examines for 2 tests show that the innovative item types in this study provided more…
Descriptors: Ability, Adults, Computer Assisted Testing, Item Response Theory
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Schlatter, Mark D. – Primus, 2002
Discusses one way of addressing the difficulty of mastering a large number of concepts through the use of ConcepTests; that is, multiple choice questions given in a lecture that test understanding as opposed to calculation. Investigates various types of ConcepTests and the material they can cover. (Author/KHR)
Descriptors: Calculus, Concept Formation, Evaluation, Group Activities
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Stientjes, Marcia K. – International Journal of Listening, 1998
Compares video and audio stimuli for listening assessment as well as multiple choice and constructed response modes, using modifications of the ACT Work Keys Listening and Writing assessment and the ACT Work Keys Listening for Understanding prototype. Confirms that examinees do less well on constructed response than on multiple choice responses.…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Constructed Response, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
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Albanese, Mark A.; Jacobs, Richard M. – Evaluation and the Health Professions, 1990
The reliability and validity of a procedure to measure diagnostic-reasoning and problem-solving skills taught in predoctoral orthodontic education were studied using 68 second year dental students. The procedure includes stimulus material and 33 multiple-choice items. It is a feasible way of assessing problem-solving skills in dentistry education…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Dental Students, Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests
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