190 likes | 403 Views
How to strategically answer Multiple Choice Questions. Goal of Presentation. To provide students with strategies on how to prepare for exams and how to strategically answer multiple choice questions. Rules of testing. Two rules to remember when taking multiple choice questions.
E N D
Goal of Presentation To provide students with strategies on how to prepare for exams and how to strategically answer multiple choice questions.
Rules of testing • Two rules to remember when taking multiple choice questions. • Budget Time Wisely • Relax and Don’t Panic! • Pace Yourself • Answer the easiest questions first.. • Don’t spend too much time on any one question.. Do your best and then move on.. • Be sure to go back to those questions you skipped..
Multiple-Choice Test-Taking Strategies • Read question carefully • Underline – Highlight – Circle important terms. • Eliminate! – Eliminate! – Eliminate! • Get rid of choices you know are incorrect at1st glance • doing so improves chances of selecting a correct answer • Only change answers if you are absolutely sure the current answer is incorrect – Don’t second guess yourself! • Use time wisely – Pace yourself • Browse test and determine time to spend on each question. (STAAR exam is 4 hours, 68 questions) • Avoid patterns (i.e. selecting “C” just because…)
Don’t be fooled • Don’t be fooled!! • Make sure you understand what the question is asking.. • Be sure you are responding to the question that is being asked.. • Watch out for tricks! Like all of the above or none of the above type questions. • Also be aware of negative response type questions (not, except, least, etc)
Example: Multiple Choice Question Type A Type A questions deal with Basic knowledge, factual information and requires knowledge of information (simplest type) Example: • What major attack led to US involvement in WWII? • Lusitania attack • Pearl Harbor attack • Cuban Missile Crisis • Tet Offensive ANSWER: B
Example: Multiple Choice Question Type B Type B question focus on application – These questions test knowledge in a specific context and requires more than memorization. Example: *Headline: Japanese Forces Occupy Bataan Peninsula* • Many of the US soldiers involved in the event mentioned in the headline above…. • Remained in trenches and resisted the Japanese invasion • Were exchanged for Japanese's prisoners of war • Escaped and were redeployed to the European theater • Died during a forced march to a prison camp in the Philippines • What clue helps you answer this question?
Example: Multiple Choice Question Type B Step:2 You might ask yourself, “what event is the headline from?” *Headline: Japanese Forces Occupy Bataan Peninsula* • Many of the US soldiers involved in the event mentioned in the headline above…. • Remained in trenches and resisted the Japanese invasion • Were exchanged for Japanese's prisoners of war • Escaped and were redeployed to the European theater • Died during a forced march to a prison camp in the Philippines Step:1 Identify key words in the question stem Step:3 This question requires you to recall information about the Bataan Death March during WWII and apply that knowledge to the headline. ANSWER: D
Example: Multiple Choice Question Type C (K-Type) Type C (Reading or image) require analysis, synthesis and evaluation in order to select an answer. These questions require integration of knowledge and decision making. Example: • FDR, “I described the American form of Government as a 3 horse team provided by the Constitution to the American people so that their field might be plowed. The 3 horses are the 3 branches of government-the Congress, the Executive, and the Courts. 2 of the horses are pulling in unison today, the 3rd is not.” Many members of Congress disagreed with President Roosevelt’s proposed solution to the problem described above because… • The Constitution required hearings to confirm judicial appointments • Supreme Court justices were subject to term limits • The power of the executive branch would increase • The time required for judicial proceedings would increase
Reading Passages • If the test requires you to read passages and then answer questions about what you read,, • By doing this,, you will know what you are looking for as you read.. • This will also help with your testing pace..
Example: Multiple Choice Question Type C • FDR, “I described the American form of Government as a 3 horse team provided by the Constitution to the American people so that their field might be plowed. The 3 horses are the 3 branches of government-the Congress, the Executive, and the Courts. 2 of the horses are pulling in unison today, the 3rd is not.” Many members of Congress disagreed with President Roosevelt’s proposed solution to the problem described above because… • The Constitution required hearings to confirm judicial appointments • Supreme Court justices were subject to term limits • The power of the executive branch would increase • The time required for judicial proceedings would increase Step:2 You might ask yourself, “what Constitutional issues came up during FDR’s Presidency” Step:1 Read the stem carefully and identify key words in the question stem Step:3You might want to reflect on when Congress disagreed with FDR during the Great Depression. What might Congress want to limit??? ANSWER: C
The Power of Panic • A person who panics… • Relies on instincts instead of knowledge • Lacks an understanding of exam content • What happens when you panic? • Memory is inhibited • Ability to focus decreases • Tend to overlook stated facts • Easily become confused • Emotions take precedence over reason • Guessing is not strategic
Eliminate to Ameliorate!(Process of Elimination) • Process of elimination is the most effective way to improve your chances of selecting a correct answer. • Eliminating Incorrect Answers • Details are important – watch the subtle differences in answers choices. (use question stem to find key text). • Answer choices must be logical • If reasoning for answer choice is not correct, then answer is not correct.
Eliminate to Ameliorate!(Process of Elimination) • Process of elimination is the most effective way to improve your chances of selecting a correct answer. • Faulty reasoning includes: • Blatant contradictions • Goes beyond the facts • Assumes facts in dispute are true • When can a right answer be wrong? • When the answer choices include an option that is MORE CORRECT <OR> a BETTER OPTION.
The Guessing Game(intelligent deduction) • Do not guess until you have eliminated all known wrong answers • Beware of the following: • Distracters or Foils (incorrect answers that appear to be correct) • Absolute certainties (always, never, cannot must) • If two answers are opposites, one is probably correct.
Response Card! • Next we will look at 5 sample questions, please label if they are a type A, B, or C question! • A: Basic Knowledge • B: Application • C: Analysis • Please number 1-5 on your note card