Islamic University of Maldives
Postgraduate Diploma in Teaching Course
AHS Campus
Prepared by: http://mohamednasir.blogspot.com/
Types of Objective Test
1.
SELECTION TYPE
A. True-false Items
-
it is written in a form of a declarative sentence. The
student must judge whether the sentence is a true or a false statement.
Suggestions for writing True-False Items
1.
The desired method of marking true or false should be
clearly explained before students begin the test.
2.
Construct statements that are definitely true of
definitely false, without additional qualifications.
3.
Use relatively short statements and eliminate
extraneous material.
4.
Keep true or false statements at approximately the
same length, and be sure that there are approximately equal numbers of true or
false.
5.
Avoid using double-negative statements. They take
extra time to translate and are difficult to interpret.
6.
Avoid the following:
a. verbal clues, absolutes and complex sentence
b. broad general statements
c. terms denoting indefinite degrees (e.g. Large, regularly) or
absolutes (e.g. Never, only, always)
d. placing items in a systematic order (e.g. TTFF, TFTF and so on)
e. taking the statements directly from the text and presenting them out
of the context.
B. Matching Items
-
it is a modification of the multiple choice question.
In a matching test items, a list of words or phrases is presented in a column,
generally on the left side of the page. These words or phrases are called the
premises of the item. A second column, generally on the right side of the page,
contains words or phrases called responses that are to be matched with the
premises.
Directions: Match A and B.
A B
1.
Lincoln a.
president during the twentieth century
2.
Nixon b.
invented the telephone
3.
Whitney c.
delivered the Emancipation Proclamation
4.
Ford d.
recent president to resign from office
5.
Bell e.
civil rights leader
6.
King f.
invented the cotton gin
7.
Washington g.
our first president
8.
Roosevelt h.
only president elected for more than two terms
* Problems in using the matching test items
above:
l
Homogeneity
l
Order of list
l
easy guessing
l
Poor directions
l
Too Many correct responses
l
Ambiguous list
Suggestions for writing matching test items
1.
Keep both the list of options and descriptions fairly
short and homogeneous.
2.
Make sure that all the options are plausible
distracters fir each description to ensure homogeneity of lists.
3.
The list of descriptions on the left side should contain
the longer phrases or statements.
4.
Each description in the list should be numbered, and
the list of options should be identified by letter.
5.
Include more options than descriptions.
6.
In the directions, specify he basis for matching and
whether options can be used more than once.
C. Multiple
Choice Item
-
it is made up of items each of which presents two or
more responses, only one of which is correct or definitely better than the
others.
-
consists of the STEM, OPTIONS, KEY
* Approaches in measuring at higher than the knowledge level:
> use pictorial, graphical or tabular stimuli
> use analogies that demonstrates relationships among
terms
> require the application of previously learned
principles or procedures to novel situations.
Suggestions for writing Multiple Choice Test Items
1.
The stem of the item should clearly formulate a
problem.
2.
Be sure that there is one and only one correct or
clearly best answer.
3.
Be sure wrong answer are plausible.
4.
Use negative questions or statements only if the
knowledge being tested requires it.
5.
Include from three to five options to optimize testing
for knowledge rather than encouraging guessing.
6.
To increase the difficulty, increase the similarity of
content among the options.
7.
Use the caption “none of the above” sparingly and only
when the keyed answer can be classified unequivocally as right or wrong.
8.
Avoid using “all of the above”.
2.
SUPPLY TYPES
A. Fill in the blank
-
allow students to answer a question or finish an
incomplete statement by filling the blank with the correct word or phrase.
Suggestions for
writing Fill in the blank items
1.
Omit only significant words from the statement.
2.
Do not omit so many words from the statement that the
intended meaning is lost.
3.
Avoid grammatical or other clues to the correct response.
4.
Be sure there is only one correct response.
5.
Make the blanks of equal length.
6.
When possible, delete words at the end of the
statement after the student has been presented a clearly defined problem.
7.
Avoid lifting statements directly from the text, lecture
of other sources.
8.
Limit the required response to a single word or
phrase.
Advantages and
disadvantages of different Objective Item formats
A. True-False
Advantages
l
tend to be short
l
faster to construct
l
scoring is easier
Disadvantages
l
tend to emphasize note memorization
l
they assume unequivocally true or false answer
l
encourage a high degree of guessing
B. Matching types
Advantages
l
simple to construct
l
ideal for measuring association between facts
l
can be more efficient than multiple choice questions
l
reduce the effects of guessing
Disadvantages
l
tend to ask trivial information
l
emphasize memorization
C. Multiple Choice Items
Advantages
l
versatile in measuring objectives
l
scoring is highly objective
l
reduce effects of guessing
l
Amendable to statistical analysis
Disadvantages
l
time consuming to write
l
if not carefully written, can have more than one
distensible correct answer.
D. Supply Type Items
Advantages
l
provide a wide sampling of content
l
efficiently measure lower levels of cognitive ability
l
minimize guessing as compared to multiple choice of
true or false items.
l
Usually provide an objective measure of student
achievement or ability.
Disadvantages
l
Are difficult to construct so that the desired
response is clearly stated.
l
Have difficulty measuring learning objectives
requiring more than simple recall of information.
l
Can often include more irrelevant clues than do other
item types.
l
Are more time consuming to score when compared to
multiple choice or true or false items.
l
Are more difficult to score since more than one answer
may have to be considered correct if the item was not properly written.
Guidelines
for writing test items
1.
Begin writing items for enough in advance that you
will have time to revise them.
2.
Match items to intended outcomes at the proper
difficulty level to provide a valid measure of instructional objectives. Limit
the question to the skill being assessed.
3.
Be sure each item deals with an important aspect of
the content area and not with trivia.
4.
Be sure that the problem posed is clear and ambiguous.
5.
Be sure that each item is independent of all other
items. The answer to one item should not be required as a condition for
answering the next item. A hint to one answer should not be embedded in another
item.
6.
Be sure that the item has one correct or best answer
on which experts would agree.
7.
Prevent unintended clues to the answer in the
statement or question. Grammatical inconsistencies such as a or an
give clues to the correct answer and will help those students who are not well
prepared for the test.
8.
Avoid replication of the textbook in writing test
items; don't quote directly from textual materials. You're usually not
interested in how well the students memorized the text. Besides, taken out of
context, direct quotes from the text are often ambiguous.
9.
Avoid trick or catch questions in an achievement test.
Don't waste time testing how well the students can interpret your intentions.
10.Try to write items that require higher level
thinking.
No comments:
Post a Comment