570 likes | 1.31k Views
Strategies for answering multiple choice questions. Don’t be chicken to answer!. Eliminate options you know to be incorrect. M ake a mark beside the words or alternatives in questions that eliminate any option. Give each option of a question the "true-false test:".
E N D
Strategies for answering multiple choice questions Don’t be chicken to answer!
Eliminate options you know to be incorrect Make a mark beside the words or alternatives in questions that eliminate any option.
Give each option of a question the "true-false test:" This may reduce your selection to the best answer
Question options that grammatically don't fit with the stem (the stem is the question or the start of the sentence you are asked to complete)
"All of the above:" If you know two of three options seem correct, "all of the above" is a strong possibility
Number answers Toss out the high and low and consider the middle range numbers
"Look alike options" …probably one is correct; choose the best but eliminate choices that mean basically the same thing, and thus cancel each other out
Double negatives: Create the equivalent positive statement
Echo options: If two options are opposite each other, chances are one of them is correct
Favor options that contain qualifiers The result is longer, more inclusive items that better fill the role of the answer
If two alternatives seem correct, compare them for differences, then refer to the stem to find your best answer
If all else fails, choose response (b) or (c). Many test creators subconsciously feel that the correct answer is "hidden" better if it is surrounded by distracters. Response (a) is usually least likely to be the correct one.
Guessing: • Always guess if you do not know… it is 100% wrong if you do not answer at all. You have a 25% chance of being right if you guess. • Use hints from questions you knowto answer questions you do not. • Change your first answerswhen you are sure of the correction, or other cues in the test cue you to change.
Remember that you are looking for the best answer, not only a correct one, and not one which must be true all of the time, in all cases, and without exception.
Still guessing? • If you see the response that you anticipated, circle it and then check to be sure that none of the other responses is better.
It’s right or wrong…. • a multiple choice exam offers you no opportunity for "partial credit." If you filled the wrong bubble, your answer is 100% wrong
Just remember: You are not “standard”…nor are you “automatic”… know that you have everything that you need to succeed.