How do you find the correct answer in multiple choice?

How do you find the correct answer in multiple choice?
How do you find the correct answer in multiple choice?

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How do you find the correct answer in multiple choice?

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Read a multi-choice question in its entirety before glancing over the answer options. It may seem like common sense, but you would be surprised at how much we don’t read the complete question! Students often think they know what a question is asking before reading it and jump straight to the most logical answer. This is a big mistake and can cost you dearly on multiple-choice exams. Read each question thoroughly before reviewing answer options.

Answer it in your mind first.

After reading a question, answer it in your mind before reviewing the answer options. This will help prevent you from talking yourself out of the correct answer.

Use the process of elimination.

Want to decrease the test pressure? Use the process of elimination. Cross out all the answers you know are incorrect, then focus on the remaining answers. Not only does this strategy save time, it greatly increases your likelihood of selecting the correct answer.

True or false test.

Read the question carefully and if you’re muddled by looking at the options, give each option a true or false test. Cross out the false answers and by this way the most appropriate answer can be found out.

Look for answers hidden in questions.

A complete reading of the question is one way to find out a few answers. This is because for some questions answers are found in the question itself. Take advantage of these freebies whenever possible.

Select the best answer.

It's important to select the answer to the question being asked, not just an answer the seems correct. Often many answers will seem correct, but there is typically the best answer to the question to get it correct..

Answer the questions you know first.

If you're having difficulty answering a question, move on and come back to tackle it once you've answered all the questions you know. Sometimes answering easier questions first can offer you insight into answering more challenging questions. The tests questions get harder as you go.

Pay attention to these words.

Pay particularly close attention to the words and an answer that includes must be irrefutable. If you can find a single counterexample, then the answer is not correct. The same holds true for the word. If an answer option includes a single counterexample will indicate the answer is not correct.

"All of the above" and "None of the above"

When you encounter "All of the above" and "None of the above" answer choices, do not select "All of the above" if you are pretty sure any one of the answers provided is incorrect. The same applies for "None of the above" if you are confident that at least one of the answer choices is true.

Keep an eye on the clock.

Part of test-taking is ensuring you can answer the questions within the allotted test time. If you spend too much time on questions, it can get you to the end. All the tips above will help, mainly focusing on the easy questions first and crossing out wrong answers. It's okay to come back to questions in the latter half of the exam. Practice the art of time management, and you'll be a multiple-choice test-taking expert in no time. 

Practice tests make perfect.

Ask your teacher for a practice test or check out Khan Academy for multiple choice practice exams. The idea here is to become familiar with the multiple choice for the particular topic. The more experience you have with problem-solving, the format, and pacing your time, the more ready you'll become on exam day. Even 30 minutes of a practice test can go a long way! 

There are many different types of question which educators use to help children and adults to learn subjects.

Multiple-choice questions are often used, where a number of different answers are provided but only one of them is correct.

Another method used is oral questions, which require the student to speak the answers rather than write them or type them.

Essay answers are sometimes required in exams and tests. In this instance, the student has to respond with a detailed argument to a question.

There are also questions posed which demand a short answer of, perhaps, one or two words or a sentence.

Let’s look at the advantages and disadvantages of these different forms of question and how effective they are in helping someone to learn about a particular academic subject.

The Advantages of Multiple-Choice Questions

One of the most obvious pros of this form of questioning is that the actual answer is visible.

In many cases a student may very well know the answer to a question but they are unable to recall it due to issues with memory or feeling pressurised in an exam situation.

Multiple-choice questions are short and sharp which means that more of them can be posed in a test situation to give a student a more thorough examination of how much they understand about a given subject.

Online resources use multiple-choice questions because they help children to concentrate on a test.

It also helps when the correct answer is given in an interactive test with an explanation of why it is right.

The Advantages of Oral Questions

Some subjects are best learned using this mode of testing, particularly languages.

Clearly, speaking an answer in French or Spanish will accelerate language learning although it is important to be able to write words down so you can read, as well as speak, them.

It can also be argued that oral questioning is also an effective way of testing how much a student knows about a subject.

There is no time to think of an answer or consider alternative answers.

The student needs to be able to provide quick answers to spoken questions and draw rapidly upon the knowledge they have.

The Advantages of Essay Questions

This type of question enables a student to demonstrate their depth of understanding about a given subject.

Answers can vary in length but students know they need to know a lot about subjects to be able to respond creatively, usually with an essay which gives a discussion-style response.

There is no way of bluffing your way through this type of questioning by guessing the correct answer so it could be argued that it provides a thorough and rigorous test of knowledge.

The Advantages of Short Answer Questions

Requiring short answers in this way is often employed by testers to analyse the basic knowledge of terms and facts about a subject.

No options for answers are given as they are with multiple-choice questions. So, the student is required to know the answer and this is a major advantage of this style of question.

These are short and sharp questions so more can be asked in an examination enabling the assessor to challenge the student on a wider breadth of information about a subject.

The Disadvantages of Different Styles of Exam Questions

So, we’ve looked at the advantages of the various types of questions students are likely to face in tests and exams. But there are disadvantages to consider with each of them too.

How do you find the correct answer in multiple choice?

With multiple-choice questions, for example, the student can get the answer right with a lucky guess. There is also no requirement to elaborate on answers, so it is not a comprehensive test of a student’s broader knowledge of a subject.

The disadvantages of oral questions are that they are time consuming since each individual student would need to be tested away from the rest of a class to prevent others copying their answers. Oral questions are also more pressurised, and this could prevent a student from giving the correct answer even when they do know it.

As we’ve seen, the essay-style of question can elicit a broader test of knowledge. But, conversely, the fact that longer answers are required means that fewer questions can be posed in an exam or test. So, fewer areas of the subject can be tested, in this respect.

There is also the element that students can get correct answers with lucky guesses since there is no requirement to elaborate on an issue.

So, now you know how multiple-choice questions help learning. Is there anything else you’d like to know about education? If so, then EQ’s Knowledge Bank is the place to go! It’s a valuable resource for parents, aimed at finding the answers to the questions you want to ask about education and schooling. Not only that, it’s also crammed full of advice and guidance on issues such as bullying, children’s self-confidence and raising happy children. It’s a veritable mine of information waiting to be discovered, just one mouse-click away!