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Writing Good Evaluation
       Questions
Types of Questions
Selected Response   Constructed Response
True/False          Fill-in-the-blank
Matching            Essay
Multiple
Choice/Response
e ss o f this
      L
Part figuring out assessment



Part figuring out answer

 More of
         th     is
(True or False)
The physical relationship
between most petroleum
products and purely                (True or False)
aqueous solutions is               As a general rule, oil and
generally such that                water do not mix.
physical interaction and
diffusion of the two is
severely limited.




          Which is easier to process for the student? Why?
(True or False)
       The physical relationship
       between most petroleum
       products and purely                      (True or False)
       aqueous solutions is                     As a general rule, oil and
       generally such that                      water do not mix.
       physical interaction and
       diffusion of the two is
       severely limited.




(A) keeps the language simple. Unless the purpose of the test is to survey the extent of
the students’ vocabulary, there is no point in using words that are unfamiliar to students
or in phrasing questions so that they are difficult to understand. Students will be
justifiably angry and frustrated if they get answers wrong because they could not
understand what was being asked rather than because they did not know the right
answer.
(True or False)
                                         (True or False)
The area of a rectangle is
                                         A 2’ x 4’ rectangle has an
found by multiplying the
                                         area of 8ft2.
length by the width.




   Which asks the student to demonstrate at a higher cognitive level? Why?
(True or False)
                                                (True or False)
    The area of a rectangle is
                                                A 2’ x 4’ rectangle has an
    found by multiplying the
                                                area of 8ft2.
    length by the width.




(B) Ask students to apply, rather than simply recall, information.
If students can apply the information they learned, it is a safe bet they have committed it
to memory. It does not follow, however, that simply because students have memorized
information they can also apply it. This being the case, it is better to aim questions at
application rather then simple recall.
5) The number of square feet in a room nine feet long and twelve
  feet wide is:

  A) 3. B) 21. C) 81. D) 108. E) 144.



6) At $2.00 per square foot, what would it cost to carpet the room
  described in question #5?

  A) $6 B) $42 C) $162            D) $216            E) $288



          Here are two successive questions on an assessment.
          What is our opportunity for improvement?
5) The number of square feet in a room nine feet long and twelve
   feet wide is:

    A) 3. B) 21. C) 81. D) 108. E) 144.



 6) At $2.00 per square foot, what would it cost to carpet the room
   described in question #5?

   A) $6 B) $42 C) $162                D) $216            E) $288


Make sure that each item is independent.
Check questions to be sure that one question does not provide a clue to some other
question or that the answer to one question is not crucial to another.
Any student missing #5 probably missed #6. Nothing gained by linking questions…
combine.
A     B    C     D
1)

2)

3)

4)

5)

6)

7)

8)




What is the answer to #8?
A     B     C     D
                         1)

                         2)

                         3)

                         4)

                         5)

                         6)

                         7)

                         8)


(D) Do not establish or follow a pattern for correct responses. Regardless of
how clever an answer pattern is, some student will eventually discover it and
compromise the test results.
(You know someone has done it, or it wouldn’t be a rule!)
The acronym USDA stands for:

 A) United States Dairy Association.
 B) United States Department of Agriculture.
 C) United States Department of Administration.
 D) United States Dietitians’ Association.




       What is our opportunity for improvement?
The acronym USDA stands for:

                A) United States Dairy Association.
                B) United States Department of Agriculture.
                C) United States Department of Administration.
                D) United States Dietitians’ Association.




(B) Do not include trick or trivial questions. Sometimes evaluators are tempted to ask
questions that require extended effort for correct interpretation that deal with unimportant
points. Trick or trivial questions not only reduce the validity and reliability of tests, but they
may have a powerful negative effect if they antagonize students.
This should be something important and relevant… something the participant should know
rather than looking up in a reference document.
How should you respond to a question from a student
once the assessment has begun?
Do not answer questions after the test has started unless it is done publically.
Sometimes individual students will seek further clarification of a question as they work through
the test. If additional information is provided to that student, the test results may be biased,
since the student will have had access to direct help when others did not. It is wise to make a
general announcement prior to each test concerning your reluctance to answer questions
during a test. This, plus careful proofreading of test prior to their administration, should
forestall most questions. IF it does become necessary to answer a question about some test
item, assume that other students may be equally confused about it and call everyone’s
attention to the clarification. Remember however, that interrupting students during a test
destroys their train of thought and thus should be avoided whenever possible.
12) John Adams was:

   A) the second president of the United States.
   B) the third president of the United States.
   C) the fourth president of the United States.
   D) none of the above.

13) The second president of the United States was:

   A) John Adams.
   B) Thomas Jefferson.
   C) James Madison.
   D) none of the above.



                How are these two questions different?
12) John Adams was:

           A) the second president of the United States.
           B) the third president of the United States.
           C) the fourth president of the United States.
           D) none of the above.

     13) The second president of the United States was:                      Stem

           A) John Adams.                                                    Answer
           B) Thomas Jefferson.
           C) James Madison.                                                 Distractors
           D) none of the above.
If the stem does its job properly, it gives the student an idea of what is sought before reading
the options. In #12, the student doesn’t know what is sought until they’ve read each option.
 Furthermore, more time is consumed because the student must read the repetitive wording
– inefficient testing.
In Question #13, the stem is clear and concise and gives the student sufficient time to begin
thinking about the answer.
13) The second president of the United States was:

   A) John Adams.
   B) Thomas Jefferson.
   C) James Madison.
   D) none of the above.




            What could be done to improve this question?
13) The second president of the United States was:

       A) John Adams.
       B) Thomas Jefferson.
       C) James Madison.
       D) none of the above.




Make distractors reasonable and plausible.

Distractors should be equally appealing to someone who is purely guessing. Someone
vaguely familiar with the early presidents would recognize the names and eliminate
option D, thereby increasing their odds of guessing a right answer from 1 in 4 to 1 in 3.
The area of a circle with a radius of 3 feet
              is:

3’            A) 9.42 ft2.
              B) 18.85 ft2.
              C) 28.27 ft2.
              D) 29.6 ft2.




     Why are these distractors plausible?
The area of a circle with a radius of 3 feet
                                   is:
                                                           = π*3
                       3’           A) 9.42 ft . 2
                                                           = 2π*3
                                    B) 18.85 ft2.
                                                           = π*32
                                    C) 28.27 ft2.
                                                           = π2*3
                                    D) 29.6 ft2.



One way to construct good distractors is based on the type of errors most students are
likely to make. In this case, each distractor is an incorrect calculation based on different
errors.
15) To make an effective presentation, the presenter should:

   A) identify the audience’s needs in advance.
   B) meet everyone in person after the presentation.
   C) summarizes the main points in a title slide.
   D) looks at the slide to focus attention on it.




             What is our opportunity for improvement?
15) To make an effective presentation, the presenter should:

          A) identify the audience’s needs in advance.
          B) meet everyone in person after the presentation.
          C) summarizes the main points in a title slide.
          D) looks at the slide to focus attention on it.




Make sure that unintentional clues are not provided.

Sometimes a student can eliminate an option simply because it is grammatically incorrect.
For example a stem ending with … “An” vs “a”
Incorrect tenses or forms of words can provide clues…
16) “Lake effect snow storms” are most likely to occur when:

   A) the temperature drops.
   B) snow is created when a cold wind blows over the warmer
   water in the lake causing the evaporating water to crystalize.
   C) it gets cold.
   D) it gets warm.
   E) it has recently rained.




    What is our opportunity for improvement?
16) “Lake effect snow storms” are most likely to occur when:

    A) the temperature drops.
    B) snow is created when a cold wind blows over the warmer
    water in the lake causing the evaporating water to crystalize.
    C) it gets cold.
    D) it gets warm.
    E) it has recently rained.




Another example of unintentional clues. Distractors that are consistently
longer or shorter than the other options.
The use of “always” or “never” is usually a big giveaway, as is the user of “all
of the above” or “none of the above”
18) Who was the second president of the United States?

   A) John Adams
   B) Warren Harding
   C) Thomas Jefferson
   D) James Madison

19) The second president of the United States was:

   A) John Adams.
   B) Warren Harding.
   C) Thomas Jefferson.
   D) James Madison.



                 Which punctuation is correct?
18) Who was the second president of the United States?

         A) John Adams
         B) Warren Harding
         C) Thomas Jefferson
         D) James Madison

   19) The second president of the United States was:

         A) John Adams.
         B) Warren Harding.
         C) Thomas Jefferson.
         D) James Madison.
If the stem is a complete question, it should end with a question mark. The answer and
the distractors would be capitalized, but not have periods unless they were complete
sentences.
If the stem is part of a statement that will be completed by one of the choices, it should
end with a colon. Colons precede lists and the choices constitute a list. If the choices
complete the statement, each should begin with a lower case letter and end with a
period because the stem plus the choice will make a complete statement.
19) Who was the second president of the United States?
    A) John Adams
    B) Warren Harding
    C) Thomas Jefferson
    D) James Madison




              What is our opportunity for improvement?
19) Who was the second president of the United States?

     A) John Adams
     B) Warren Harding
     C) Thomas Jefferson
     D) James Madison




Format… Skip a line between the stem and the choices to make it easier for students to
visually separate the two components. Also keep both the stem and the choices on the
same page, if there is not enough room, move the whole question to a new page.
(True or False)
If every teacher were given his or her own computer,
most of the difficult problems currently limiting wider
use of computer-assisted instruction would be solved.




       What is the opportunity for improvement?
(True or False)
         If every teacher were given his or her own computer,
         most of the difficult problems currently limiting wider
         use of computer-assisted instruction would be solved.



“Most of the difficult problems”? How many is that? 99%? 52%?
True False items are most appropriate for lower-level cognitive skills. (Keep in mind it is a
50/50 guess) Although True-False items are often misused, it is possible to construct true-
false items that cover the analysis level of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Other points to keep in mind when writing True/False items:
•Be sure every item is wholly true or wholly false.
•Whenever possible, avoid such terms as ‘generally’ or ‘usually’. (Although not as much as a
giveaway as “always” or “never”, they are still open to varying interpretations.)
•Be sure that items are not dependent upon insignificant facts. Make sure each item asks
something of importance and worth remembering.
•Be sure that correct items are not consistently longer or shorter than incorrect items.
•Avoid the use of double negatives, but if you use any negative at all, emphasize it.
Connect the state with its state bird.

     ___Connecticut                      A) Robin
     ___Nevada                           B) Mountain Bluebird
     ___Idaho                            C) Bluebird
     ___Ohio                             D) Cardinal
     ___Oregon                           E) Western Meadowlark
     ___Mississippi                      F) Mockingbird
     ___Texas                            G) Chickadee
     ___Wisconsin                        H) Lark Bunting
     ___Minnesota                        I) Common Loon
     ___North Dakota                     J) Brown Thrasher
     ___South Carolina                   K) Great Carolina Wren
     ___Iowa                             L) Eastern Goldfinch




          What is our opportunity for improvement?
Connect the state with its state bird.

                   ___Connecticut                      A) Robin
                   ___Nevada                           B) Mountain Bluebird
                   ___Idaho                            C) Bluebird
                   ___Ohio                             D) Cardinal
                   ___Oregon                           E) Western Meadowlark
                   ___Mississippi                      F) Mockingbird
                   ___Texas                            G) Chickadee
                   ___Wisconsin                        H) Lark Bunting
                   ___Minnesota                        I) Common Loon
                   ___North Dakota                     J) Brown Thrasher
                   ___South Carolina                   K) Great Carolina Wren
                   ___Iowa                             L) Eastern Goldfinch

Matching Items are used most easily to measure low-level cognitive skills such as recall or
comprehension. Link People to dates, capitals to states, labels for charts, etc.
In this question, neither list is in alphabetical order so students must continually scan the list
if they know the answer. If the list is 1-1 match, student can guess right answers by
eliminating some options. So…
Connect the state with its state bird.

                  ___Connecticut                      A) Bluebird
                  ___Idaho                            B) Brown Thrasher
                  ___Iowa                             C) Cardinal
                  ___Minnesota                        D) Chickadee
                  ___Mississippi                      E) Common Loon
                  ___Nevada                           F) Eastern Goldfinch
                  ___North Dakota                     G) Great Carolina Wren
                  ___Ohio                             H) Lark Bunting
                  ___Oregon                           I) Mockingbird
                  ___South Carolina                   J) ) Mountain Bluebird
                  ___Texas                            K) Robin
                  ___Wisconsin                        L) Western Meadowlark

1. Sort both lists chronologically
2. Add 1-many options… in this case, some birds are used multiple times for different
   states, and some not at all. Alternatively, have more choices than matches. This prevents
   guessing by elimination. (Note this in the instructions too!)
3. Ensure all items are around one topic… (seems obvious, but again…)
4. Shorten list… usually no more than 10
Fill-in-the-Blank vs. Essay




How is grading different for these two items?
Fill-in-the-Blank vs. Essay




For completion items, write items that can be completed with a single word or short phrase.
 When students are required to ‘fill in’ more than a few words, the grading of the item is no
longer black and white, and it ceases to be a completion item.
The first World War began in ____________.




     What is our opportunity for improvement?
The first World War began in ____________.




State? Country? Continent? Year? Decade?

Be sure that only one word or phrase can correctly complete the sentence.
21) ______________ was the second president of the United States.




22) The second president of the United States was ______________.




           Which completion item is easier for the student?
21) ______________ was the second president of the United States.




22) The second president of the United States was ______________.




       Put blanks near the end of the sentence so the student is
       guided toward the correct response.
The letter from the 1776 General Congress to King
George that severed all political connections between
America and Britain is known as the
_________________ ___ ___________________.




           What is our opportunity for improvement?
The letter from the 1776 General Congress to King
   George that severed all political connections between
   America and Britain is known as the
   _____________ ______________ _______________.




Make all blanks the same length. Making the length of the lines correspond to
the words, gives away hints for students who are guessing.
__________ __________ wrote _________ ___________.




            What is our opportunity for improvement?
__________ __________ wrote _________ ___________.




No more than 2 blanks in an item. The more blanks in an item, the greater the
chance the student will be unable to determine the question.
Benefits and Risks of Essays
      Advantages                           Disadvantages
1.   In-depth sampling of students’   1. Teacher fatigue,
     knowledge of a specific topic.      subconscious biases, and
2.   Students must interpret,            other extraneous variables
     evaluate, and organize data;        can affect grade.
     draw conclusions; make           2. Essay tests inherently biased
     inferences; and express             in favor of students who can
     thoughts coherently.                write quickly, neatly, and
3.   Emphasizes higher-level             effectively.
     cognitive skills such as         3. Reduced reliability and
     synthesis and evaluation.           validity because only a few
4.   Easier to construct than            questions are asked.
     objective tests.                 4. Longer time to grade.
                                      5. Increased possibility of
                                         bluffing.
M. A. Lorber and W. D. Pierce (1990). Objectives, Methods, and
Evaluation for Secondary Teaching (3rd Edition). Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
Prentice Hall.

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Writing Good Evaluation Questions

  • 2. Types of Questions Selected Response Constructed Response True/False Fill-in-the-blank Matching Essay Multiple Choice/Response
  • 3. e ss o f this L Part figuring out assessment Part figuring out answer More of th is
  • 4. (True or False) The physical relationship between most petroleum products and purely (True or False) aqueous solutions is As a general rule, oil and generally such that water do not mix. physical interaction and diffusion of the two is severely limited. Which is easier to process for the student? Why?
  • 5. (True or False) The physical relationship between most petroleum products and purely (True or False) aqueous solutions is As a general rule, oil and generally such that water do not mix. physical interaction and diffusion of the two is severely limited. (A) keeps the language simple. Unless the purpose of the test is to survey the extent of the students’ vocabulary, there is no point in using words that are unfamiliar to students or in phrasing questions so that they are difficult to understand. Students will be justifiably angry and frustrated if they get answers wrong because they could not understand what was being asked rather than because they did not know the right answer.
  • 6. (True or False) (True or False) The area of a rectangle is A 2’ x 4’ rectangle has an found by multiplying the area of 8ft2. length by the width. Which asks the student to demonstrate at a higher cognitive level? Why?
  • 7. (True or False) (True or False) The area of a rectangle is A 2’ x 4’ rectangle has an found by multiplying the area of 8ft2. length by the width. (B) Ask students to apply, rather than simply recall, information. If students can apply the information they learned, it is a safe bet they have committed it to memory. It does not follow, however, that simply because students have memorized information they can also apply it. This being the case, it is better to aim questions at application rather then simple recall.
  • 8. 5) The number of square feet in a room nine feet long and twelve feet wide is: A) 3. B) 21. C) 81. D) 108. E) 144. 6) At $2.00 per square foot, what would it cost to carpet the room described in question #5? A) $6 B) $42 C) $162 D) $216 E) $288 Here are two successive questions on an assessment. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 9. 5) The number of square feet in a room nine feet long and twelve feet wide is: A) 3. B) 21. C) 81. D) 108. E) 144. 6) At $2.00 per square foot, what would it cost to carpet the room described in question #5? A) $6 B) $42 C) $162 D) $216 E) $288 Make sure that each item is independent. Check questions to be sure that one question does not provide a clue to some other question or that the answer to one question is not crucial to another. Any student missing #5 probably missed #6. Nothing gained by linking questions… combine.
  • 10. A B C D 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) What is the answer to #8?
  • 11. A B C D 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) (D) Do not establish or follow a pattern for correct responses. Regardless of how clever an answer pattern is, some student will eventually discover it and compromise the test results. (You know someone has done it, or it wouldn’t be a rule!)
  • 12. The acronym USDA stands for: A) United States Dairy Association. B) United States Department of Agriculture. C) United States Department of Administration. D) United States Dietitians’ Association. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 13. The acronym USDA stands for: A) United States Dairy Association. B) United States Department of Agriculture. C) United States Department of Administration. D) United States Dietitians’ Association. (B) Do not include trick or trivial questions. Sometimes evaluators are tempted to ask questions that require extended effort for correct interpretation that deal with unimportant points. Trick or trivial questions not only reduce the validity and reliability of tests, but they may have a powerful negative effect if they antagonize students. This should be something important and relevant… something the participant should know rather than looking up in a reference document.
  • 14. How should you respond to a question from a student once the assessment has begun?
  • 15. Do not answer questions after the test has started unless it is done publically. Sometimes individual students will seek further clarification of a question as they work through the test. If additional information is provided to that student, the test results may be biased, since the student will have had access to direct help when others did not. It is wise to make a general announcement prior to each test concerning your reluctance to answer questions during a test. This, plus careful proofreading of test prior to their administration, should forestall most questions. IF it does become necessary to answer a question about some test item, assume that other students may be equally confused about it and call everyone’s attention to the clarification. Remember however, that interrupting students during a test destroys their train of thought and thus should be avoided whenever possible.
  • 16. 12) John Adams was: A) the second president of the United States. B) the third president of the United States. C) the fourth president of the United States. D) none of the above. 13) The second president of the United States was: A) John Adams. B) Thomas Jefferson. C) James Madison. D) none of the above. How are these two questions different?
  • 17. 12) John Adams was: A) the second president of the United States. B) the third president of the United States. C) the fourth president of the United States. D) none of the above. 13) The second president of the United States was: Stem A) John Adams. Answer B) Thomas Jefferson. C) James Madison. Distractors D) none of the above. If the stem does its job properly, it gives the student an idea of what is sought before reading the options. In #12, the student doesn’t know what is sought until they’ve read each option. Furthermore, more time is consumed because the student must read the repetitive wording – inefficient testing. In Question #13, the stem is clear and concise and gives the student sufficient time to begin thinking about the answer.
  • 18. 13) The second president of the United States was: A) John Adams. B) Thomas Jefferson. C) James Madison. D) none of the above. What could be done to improve this question?
  • 19. 13) The second president of the United States was: A) John Adams. B) Thomas Jefferson. C) James Madison. D) none of the above. Make distractors reasonable and plausible. Distractors should be equally appealing to someone who is purely guessing. Someone vaguely familiar with the early presidents would recognize the names and eliminate option D, thereby increasing their odds of guessing a right answer from 1 in 4 to 1 in 3.
  • 20. The area of a circle with a radius of 3 feet is: 3’ A) 9.42 ft2. B) 18.85 ft2. C) 28.27 ft2. D) 29.6 ft2. Why are these distractors plausible?
  • 21. The area of a circle with a radius of 3 feet is: = π*3 3’ A) 9.42 ft . 2 = 2π*3 B) 18.85 ft2. = π*32 C) 28.27 ft2. = π2*3 D) 29.6 ft2. One way to construct good distractors is based on the type of errors most students are likely to make. In this case, each distractor is an incorrect calculation based on different errors.
  • 22. 15) To make an effective presentation, the presenter should: A) identify the audience’s needs in advance. B) meet everyone in person after the presentation. C) summarizes the main points in a title slide. D) looks at the slide to focus attention on it. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 23. 15) To make an effective presentation, the presenter should: A) identify the audience’s needs in advance. B) meet everyone in person after the presentation. C) summarizes the main points in a title slide. D) looks at the slide to focus attention on it. Make sure that unintentional clues are not provided. Sometimes a student can eliminate an option simply because it is grammatically incorrect. For example a stem ending with … “An” vs “a” Incorrect tenses or forms of words can provide clues…
  • 24. 16) “Lake effect snow storms” are most likely to occur when: A) the temperature drops. B) snow is created when a cold wind blows over the warmer water in the lake causing the evaporating water to crystalize. C) it gets cold. D) it gets warm. E) it has recently rained. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 25. 16) “Lake effect snow storms” are most likely to occur when: A) the temperature drops. B) snow is created when a cold wind blows over the warmer water in the lake causing the evaporating water to crystalize. C) it gets cold. D) it gets warm. E) it has recently rained. Another example of unintentional clues. Distractors that are consistently longer or shorter than the other options. The use of “always” or “never” is usually a big giveaway, as is the user of “all of the above” or “none of the above”
  • 26. 18) Who was the second president of the United States? A) John Adams B) Warren Harding C) Thomas Jefferson D) James Madison 19) The second president of the United States was: A) John Adams. B) Warren Harding. C) Thomas Jefferson. D) James Madison. Which punctuation is correct?
  • 27. 18) Who was the second president of the United States? A) John Adams B) Warren Harding C) Thomas Jefferson D) James Madison 19) The second president of the United States was: A) John Adams. B) Warren Harding. C) Thomas Jefferson. D) James Madison. If the stem is a complete question, it should end with a question mark. The answer and the distractors would be capitalized, but not have periods unless they were complete sentences. If the stem is part of a statement that will be completed by one of the choices, it should end with a colon. Colons precede lists and the choices constitute a list. If the choices complete the statement, each should begin with a lower case letter and end with a period because the stem plus the choice will make a complete statement.
  • 28. 19) Who was the second president of the United States? A) John Adams B) Warren Harding C) Thomas Jefferson D) James Madison What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 29. 19) Who was the second president of the United States? A) John Adams B) Warren Harding C) Thomas Jefferson D) James Madison Format… Skip a line between the stem and the choices to make it easier for students to visually separate the two components. Also keep both the stem and the choices on the same page, if there is not enough room, move the whole question to a new page.
  • 30. (True or False) If every teacher were given his or her own computer, most of the difficult problems currently limiting wider use of computer-assisted instruction would be solved. What is the opportunity for improvement?
  • 31. (True or False) If every teacher were given his or her own computer, most of the difficult problems currently limiting wider use of computer-assisted instruction would be solved. “Most of the difficult problems”? How many is that? 99%? 52%? True False items are most appropriate for lower-level cognitive skills. (Keep in mind it is a 50/50 guess) Although True-False items are often misused, it is possible to construct true- false items that cover the analysis level of Bloom’s Taxonomy. Other points to keep in mind when writing True/False items: •Be sure every item is wholly true or wholly false. •Whenever possible, avoid such terms as ‘generally’ or ‘usually’. (Although not as much as a giveaway as “always” or “never”, they are still open to varying interpretations.) •Be sure that items are not dependent upon insignificant facts. Make sure each item asks something of importance and worth remembering. •Be sure that correct items are not consistently longer or shorter than incorrect items. •Avoid the use of double negatives, but if you use any negative at all, emphasize it.
  • 32. Connect the state with its state bird. ___Connecticut A) Robin ___Nevada B) Mountain Bluebird ___Idaho C) Bluebird ___Ohio D) Cardinal ___Oregon E) Western Meadowlark ___Mississippi F) Mockingbird ___Texas G) Chickadee ___Wisconsin H) Lark Bunting ___Minnesota I) Common Loon ___North Dakota J) Brown Thrasher ___South Carolina K) Great Carolina Wren ___Iowa L) Eastern Goldfinch What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 33. Connect the state with its state bird. ___Connecticut A) Robin ___Nevada B) Mountain Bluebird ___Idaho C) Bluebird ___Ohio D) Cardinal ___Oregon E) Western Meadowlark ___Mississippi F) Mockingbird ___Texas G) Chickadee ___Wisconsin H) Lark Bunting ___Minnesota I) Common Loon ___North Dakota J) Brown Thrasher ___South Carolina K) Great Carolina Wren ___Iowa L) Eastern Goldfinch Matching Items are used most easily to measure low-level cognitive skills such as recall or comprehension. Link People to dates, capitals to states, labels for charts, etc. In this question, neither list is in alphabetical order so students must continually scan the list if they know the answer. If the list is 1-1 match, student can guess right answers by eliminating some options. So…
  • 34. Connect the state with its state bird. ___Connecticut A) Bluebird ___Idaho B) Brown Thrasher ___Iowa C) Cardinal ___Minnesota D) Chickadee ___Mississippi E) Common Loon ___Nevada F) Eastern Goldfinch ___North Dakota G) Great Carolina Wren ___Ohio H) Lark Bunting ___Oregon I) Mockingbird ___South Carolina J) ) Mountain Bluebird ___Texas K) Robin ___Wisconsin L) Western Meadowlark 1. Sort both lists chronologically 2. Add 1-many options… in this case, some birds are used multiple times for different states, and some not at all. Alternatively, have more choices than matches. This prevents guessing by elimination. (Note this in the instructions too!) 3. Ensure all items are around one topic… (seems obvious, but again…) 4. Shorten list… usually no more than 10
  • 35. Fill-in-the-Blank vs. Essay How is grading different for these two items?
  • 36. Fill-in-the-Blank vs. Essay For completion items, write items that can be completed with a single word or short phrase. When students are required to ‘fill in’ more than a few words, the grading of the item is no longer black and white, and it ceases to be a completion item.
  • 37. The first World War began in ____________. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 38. The first World War began in ____________. State? Country? Continent? Year? Decade? Be sure that only one word or phrase can correctly complete the sentence.
  • 39. 21) ______________ was the second president of the United States. 22) The second president of the United States was ______________. Which completion item is easier for the student?
  • 40. 21) ______________ was the second president of the United States. 22) The second president of the United States was ______________. Put blanks near the end of the sentence so the student is guided toward the correct response.
  • 41. The letter from the 1776 General Congress to King George that severed all political connections between America and Britain is known as the _________________ ___ ___________________. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 42. The letter from the 1776 General Congress to King George that severed all political connections between America and Britain is known as the _____________ ______________ _______________. Make all blanks the same length. Making the length of the lines correspond to the words, gives away hints for students who are guessing.
  • 43. __________ __________ wrote _________ ___________. What is our opportunity for improvement?
  • 44. __________ __________ wrote _________ ___________. No more than 2 blanks in an item. The more blanks in an item, the greater the chance the student will be unable to determine the question.
  • 45. Benefits and Risks of Essays Advantages Disadvantages 1. In-depth sampling of students’ 1. Teacher fatigue, knowledge of a specific topic. subconscious biases, and 2. Students must interpret, other extraneous variables evaluate, and organize data; can affect grade. draw conclusions; make 2. Essay tests inherently biased inferences; and express in favor of students who can thoughts coherently. write quickly, neatly, and 3. Emphasizes higher-level effectively. cognitive skills such as 3. Reduced reliability and synthesis and evaluation. validity because only a few 4. Easier to construct than questions are asked. objective tests. 4. Longer time to grade. 5. Increased possibility of bluffing.
  • 46. M. A. Lorber and W. D. Pierce (1990). Objectives, Methods, and Evaluation for Secondary Teaching (3rd Edition). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Two types of questions:
  2. C) Make sure that unintentional clues are not provided. Sometimes a student can eliminate an option simply because it is grammatically incorrect. For example a stem ending with … “An” vs “a” Incorrect tenses or forms of words can provide clues…
  3. .
  4. Essay Test Essays have their own benefits and risks… consistent grading is a concern