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How to Write Good Test Questions
When preparing a test on any given subject matter, you are flooded with available test
formats and test questions to select from. So, how do you write the best test questions for
your students? The first step in creating a strong test for students is to choose the best test
format for the cognitive ability or comprehension that you are seeking to evaluate. Then,
you must create good test questions for the chosen test format for your students. By
practicing the tips outlined below, you will be well positioned to create strong test
questions for your classroom.
Choosing a Test Format
Before you begin to write test questions, you need to determine which type of test format
you are going to utilize. The most common test formats include multiple choice
questions, true or false questions, fill in the blank questions and open-ended questions.
Choose the format that best measures the student's cognitive ability in the given subject
matter.
For example, if you want the student to compare and contrast an issue taught during a
history lesson, open ended questions may be the best option to evaluate the student's
understanding of the subject matter. If you are seeking to measure the student's reasoning
skills, analysis skills or general comprehension of a subject matter, consider selecting
primarily multiple choice test questions. Or, for a varied approach, utilize a combination
of all available test question types so that you can appeal to the learning strengths of any
student on an exam.
Another factor to consider when selecting a test format is how much time the students
will have available to take the test and then also how long you will have to score them.
For larger classrooms, essay format or open ended question format test questions will be
more difficult to manage both the student's time and your own as you grade them. So,
take into consideration both the objectives of the test and the overall time available for
taking and scoring your tests when selecting the best format. Once you have selected the
test format, you will need to write good test questions to utilize within the test structure.
Multiple Choice Questions
Multiple choice questions offer the most flexibility to the teacher as they can formulate a
variety of test question structures. Multiple choice questions are a great way to test a
student's comprehension level of a particular subject matter. But, they can often be the
most difficult and time consuming for the teacher to construct. They comprise of a test
question stem and several available options for the student to select from as their answer.
Here are some ideas to utilize when constructing multiple choice test questions:
• Don't use excessive wording when creating the test question stem. Be clear and
concise in your word and phrase choices.
• Make sure that there is only one clearly correct answer from the options given to
the student.
• Provide between 3-5 plausible choices for the student to select from as their
answer
• Minimize the use of 'all of the above' or 'none of the above' question answers.
• Randomly distribute the correct answer options i.e. A, B, C, D etc so that there is
not a clear pattern that becomes obvious to the student
• Be sure to use test questions that test knowledge, application, comprehension,
analysis and evaluation throughout your test to get the best overall sense of the
student's understanding and mastery of a subject matter
True or False Questions
True and false questions are best used when you are looking to test a student's recall
ability of specific facts or knowledge. Keep the following tips in mind when creating true
or false test questions:
• Make sure that the answer is clear and that it could not be either or
• Try not to use negative questions such as 'this novel was not written by...." but
instead use 'this novel was written by...."
• Use a random order of true and false responses with your test questions to avoid
creating a pattern
• Use more false questions than true questions as they have been proven to cater
towards higher cognitive level students
Fill-in-the-Blank Questions
Fill in the blank questions require the student to know the correct answer rather than
having the ability to guess from a list of possible answers. Here are some tips to consider
when writing good fill in the blank test questions:
• Ensure that there is only one possible correct answer to avoid confusion and
difficulty grading
• Blanks should come at the end or as close to the end of the question or statement
as possible
• Questions should recall important information taught within the lesson plans
Open-Ended Questions
Open ended or essay format questions are excellent for measuring higher level cognitive
learning and overall comprehension of a subject. They allow the student to select content
for their response, to organize their thoughts in a logical manner and to present their ideas
on a given subject matter. Overall, these types of test questions allow the teacher to test
the student's broader understanding of a subject matter. And, these types of questions are
often more applicable to real life situations that the student may be presented with in the
future.
When writing good open-ended questions, keep the following tips in mind:
• Be sure that the test question clearly states the answer that you are seeking from
the student. For example, 'discuss the recent election outcome' is a poor test
question. But, worded as 'describe the potential positive and negative impacts that
Barack Obama's recent election win for president could have on the US's
economy' is a better test question as it clearly gives the student something to
compare and contrast within a focused area, the US economy.
• If you are requiring the student to prepare a longer essay (2-3 pages), include
several questions that are intended to be in addition to the primary question for the
student to respond to rather than only a single question to answer.
• If you are looking to test comprehension, a good opening line for the test question
is, 'Explain the following..."
• If you are seeking to test the student's ability to analyze a concept, a good opening
phrase for your test question is, 'compare and contrast....."
• Don't give students the option to pick 2 or 3 questions from among 5. This can
add confusion for the students and complexity for the teacher when grading for a
classroom. How can you accurately compare students to each other when they
have answered different test questions?
When creating good test questions, first be sure that you have selected the best format for
what skills or concepts you are seeking to test for. Then, take your time to construct the
best possible test questions using the tips mentioned above
Designing Test Questions
Descriptions follow with uses, advantages, disadvantages, and tips for writing test questions in
the following formats.
• True/False
• Matching
• Multiple Choice
• Short Answer
• Essay
• Oral Exams
• Student Portfolios
• Performance
True/False
Good for:
• Knowledge level content
• Evaluating student understanding of popular misconceptions
• Concepts with two logical responses
Advantages:
• Can test large amounts of content
• Students can answer 3-4 questions per minute
Disadvantages:
• They are easy
• It is difficult to discriminate between students that know the material and students who
don't
• Students have a 50-50 chance of getting the right answer by guessing
• Need a large number of items for high reliability
Tips for Writing Good True/False items:
• Avoid double negatives.
• Avoid long/complex sentences.
• Use specific determinants with caution: never, only, all, none, always, could, might, can,
may, sometimes, generally, some, few.
• Use only one central idea in each item.
• Don't emphasize the trivial.
• Use exact quantitative language
• Don't lift items straight from the book.
• Make more false than true (60/40). (Students are more likely to answer true.)
Matching
Good for:
• Knowledge level
• Some comprehension level, if appropriately constructed
Types:
• Terms with definitions
• Phrases with other phrases
• Causes with effects
• Parts with larger units
• Problems with solutions
Advantages:
• Maximum coverage at knowledge level in a minimum amount of space/preptime
• Valuable in content areas that have a lot of facts
Disadvantages:
• Time consuming for students
• Not good for higher levels of learning
Tips for Writing Good Matching items:
• Need 15 items or less.
• Give good directions on basis for matching.
• Use items in response column more than once (reduces the effects of guessing).
• Use homogenous material in each exercise.
• Make all responses plausible.
• Put all items on a single page.
• Put response in some logical order (chronological, alphabetical, etc.).
• Responses should be short.
Multiple Choice
Good for:
• Application, synthesis, analysis, and evaluation levels
Types:
• Question/Right answer
• Incomplete statement
• Best answer
Advantages:
• Very effective
• Versatile at all levels
• Minimum of writing for student
• Guessing reduced
• Can cover broad range of content
Disadvantages:
• Difficult to construct good test items.
• Difficult to come up with plausible distractors/alternative responses.
Tips for Writing Good Multiple Choice items:
• Stem should present single, clearly formulated problem.
• Stem should be in simple, understood language; delete extraneous words.
• Avoid "all of the above"--can answer based on partial knowledge (if one is incorrect or
two are correct, but unsure of the third...).
• Avoid "none of the above."
• Make all distractors plausible/homoegenous.
• Don't overlap response alternatives (decreases discrimination between students who
know the material and those who don't).
• Don't use double negatives.
• Present alternatives in logical or numerical order.
• Place correct answer at random (A answer is most often).
• Make each item independent of others on test.
• Way to judge a good stem: student's who know the content should be able to answer
before reading the alternatives
• List alternatives on separate lines, indent, separate by blank line, use letters vs. numbers
for alternative answers.
• Need more than 3 alternatives, 4 is best.
Short Answer
Good for:
• Application, synthesis, analysis, and evaluation levels
Advantages:
• Easy to construct
• Good for "who," what," where," "when" content
• Minimizes guessing
• Encourages more intensive study-student must know the answer vs. recognizing the
answer.
Disadvantages:
• May overemphasize memorization of facts
• Take care - questions may have more than one correct answer
• Scoring is laborious
Tips for Writing Good Short Answer Items:
• When using with definitions: supply term, not the definition-for a better judge of
student knowledge.
• For numbers, indicate the degree of precision/units expected.
• Use direct questions, not an incomplete statement.
• If you do use incomplete statements, don't use more than 2 blanks within an item.
• Arrange blanks to make scoring easy.
• Try to phrase question so there is only one answer possible.
Essay
Good for:
• Application, synthesis and evaluation levels
Types:
• Extended response: synthesis and evaluation levels; a lot of freedom in answers
• Restricted response: more consistent scoring, outlines parameters of responses
Advantages:
• Students less likely to guess
• Easy to construct
• Stimulates more study
• Allows students to demonstrate ability to organize knowledge, express opinions, show
originality.
Disadvantages:
• Can limit amount of material tested, therefore has decreased validity.
• Subjective, potentially unreliable scoring.
• Time consuming to score.
Tips for Writing Good Essay Items:
• Provide reasonable time limits for thinking and writing.
• Avoid letting them to answer a choice of questions (You won't get a good idea of the
broadness of student achievement when they only answer a set of questions.)
• Give definitive task to student-compare, analyze, evaluate, etc.
• Use checklist point system to score with a model answer: write outline, determine how
many points to assign to each part
• Score one question at a time-all at the same time.
Oral Exams
Good for:
• Knowledge, synthesis, evaluation levels
Advantages:
• Useful as an instructional tool-allows students to learn at the same time as testing.
• Allows teacher to give clues to facilitate learning.
• Useful to test speech and foreign language competencies.
Disadvantages:
• Time consuming to give and take.
• Could have poor student performance because they haven't had much practice with it.
• Provides no written record without checklists.
Student Portfolios
Good for:
• Knowledge, application, synthesis, evaluation levels
Advantages:
• Can assess compatible skills: writing, documentation, critical thinking, problem solving
• Can allow student to present totality of learning.
• Students become active participants in the evaluation process.
Disadvantages:
• Can be difficult and time consuming to grade.
Performance
Good for:
• Application of knowledge, skills, abilities
Advantages:
• Measures some skills and abilities not possible to measure in other ways
Disadvantages:
• Can not be used in some fields of study
• Difficult to construct
• Difficult to grade
• Time-consuming to give and take
Student Portfolios
Good for:
• Knowledge, application, synthesis, evaluation levels
Advantages:
• Can assess compatible skills: writing, documentation, critical thinking, problem solving
• Can allow student to present totality of learning.
• Students become active participants in the evaluation process.
Disadvantages:
• Can be difficult and time consuming to grade.
Performance
Good for:
• Application of knowledge, skills, abilities
Advantages:
• Measures some skills and abilities not possible to measure in other ways
Disadvantages:
• Can not be used in some fields of study
• Difficult to construct
• Difficult to grade
• Time-consuming to give and take

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How to write good test questions

  • 1. How to Write Good Test Questions When preparing a test on any given subject matter, you are flooded with available test formats and test questions to select from. So, how do you write the best test questions for your students? The first step in creating a strong test for students is to choose the best test format for the cognitive ability or comprehension that you are seeking to evaluate. Then, you must create good test questions for the chosen test format for your students. By practicing the tips outlined below, you will be well positioned to create strong test questions for your classroom. Choosing a Test Format Before you begin to write test questions, you need to determine which type of test format you are going to utilize. The most common test formats include multiple choice questions, true or false questions, fill in the blank questions and open-ended questions. Choose the format that best measures the student's cognitive ability in the given subject matter. For example, if you want the student to compare and contrast an issue taught during a history lesson, open ended questions may be the best option to evaluate the student's understanding of the subject matter. If you are seeking to measure the student's reasoning skills, analysis skills or general comprehension of a subject matter, consider selecting primarily multiple choice test questions. Or, for a varied approach, utilize a combination of all available test question types so that you can appeal to the learning strengths of any student on an exam. Another factor to consider when selecting a test format is how much time the students will have available to take the test and then also how long you will have to score them. For larger classrooms, essay format or open ended question format test questions will be more difficult to manage both the student's time and your own as you grade them. So, take into consideration both the objectives of the test and the overall time available for taking and scoring your tests when selecting the best format. Once you have selected the test format, you will need to write good test questions to utilize within the test structure. Multiple Choice Questions Multiple choice questions offer the most flexibility to the teacher as they can formulate a variety of test question structures. Multiple choice questions are a great way to test a student's comprehension level of a particular subject matter. But, they can often be the most difficult and time consuming for the teacher to construct. They comprise of a test question stem and several available options for the student to select from as their answer. Here are some ideas to utilize when constructing multiple choice test questions: • Don't use excessive wording when creating the test question stem. Be clear and concise in your word and phrase choices. • Make sure that there is only one clearly correct answer from the options given to the student.
  • 2. • Provide between 3-5 plausible choices for the student to select from as their answer • Minimize the use of 'all of the above' or 'none of the above' question answers. • Randomly distribute the correct answer options i.e. A, B, C, D etc so that there is not a clear pattern that becomes obvious to the student • Be sure to use test questions that test knowledge, application, comprehension, analysis and evaluation throughout your test to get the best overall sense of the student's understanding and mastery of a subject matter True or False Questions True and false questions are best used when you are looking to test a student's recall ability of specific facts or knowledge. Keep the following tips in mind when creating true or false test questions: • Make sure that the answer is clear and that it could not be either or • Try not to use negative questions such as 'this novel was not written by...." but instead use 'this novel was written by...." • Use a random order of true and false responses with your test questions to avoid creating a pattern • Use more false questions than true questions as they have been proven to cater towards higher cognitive level students Fill-in-the-Blank Questions Fill in the blank questions require the student to know the correct answer rather than having the ability to guess from a list of possible answers. Here are some tips to consider when writing good fill in the blank test questions: • Ensure that there is only one possible correct answer to avoid confusion and difficulty grading • Blanks should come at the end or as close to the end of the question or statement as possible • Questions should recall important information taught within the lesson plans Open-Ended Questions Open ended or essay format questions are excellent for measuring higher level cognitive learning and overall comprehension of a subject. They allow the student to select content for their response, to organize their thoughts in a logical manner and to present their ideas on a given subject matter. Overall, these types of test questions allow the teacher to test the student's broader understanding of a subject matter. And, these types of questions are often more applicable to real life situations that the student may be presented with in the future. When writing good open-ended questions, keep the following tips in mind:
  • 3. • Be sure that the test question clearly states the answer that you are seeking from the student. For example, 'discuss the recent election outcome' is a poor test question. But, worded as 'describe the potential positive and negative impacts that Barack Obama's recent election win for president could have on the US's economy' is a better test question as it clearly gives the student something to compare and contrast within a focused area, the US economy. • If you are requiring the student to prepare a longer essay (2-3 pages), include several questions that are intended to be in addition to the primary question for the student to respond to rather than only a single question to answer. • If you are looking to test comprehension, a good opening line for the test question is, 'Explain the following..." • If you are seeking to test the student's ability to analyze a concept, a good opening phrase for your test question is, 'compare and contrast....." • Don't give students the option to pick 2 or 3 questions from among 5. This can add confusion for the students and complexity for the teacher when grading for a classroom. How can you accurately compare students to each other when they have answered different test questions? When creating good test questions, first be sure that you have selected the best format for what skills or concepts you are seeking to test for. Then, take your time to construct the best possible test questions using the tips mentioned above
  • 4. Designing Test Questions Descriptions follow with uses, advantages, disadvantages, and tips for writing test questions in the following formats. • True/False • Matching • Multiple Choice • Short Answer • Essay • Oral Exams • Student Portfolios • Performance True/False Good for: • Knowledge level content • Evaluating student understanding of popular misconceptions • Concepts with two logical responses Advantages: • Can test large amounts of content • Students can answer 3-4 questions per minute Disadvantages: • They are easy • It is difficult to discriminate between students that know the material and students who don't • Students have a 50-50 chance of getting the right answer by guessing • Need a large number of items for high reliability Tips for Writing Good True/False items: • Avoid double negatives. • Avoid long/complex sentences. • Use specific determinants with caution: never, only, all, none, always, could, might, can, may, sometimes, generally, some, few. • Use only one central idea in each item. • Don't emphasize the trivial.
  • 5. • Use exact quantitative language • Don't lift items straight from the book. • Make more false than true (60/40). (Students are more likely to answer true.) Matching Good for: • Knowledge level • Some comprehension level, if appropriately constructed Types: • Terms with definitions • Phrases with other phrases • Causes with effects • Parts with larger units • Problems with solutions Advantages: • Maximum coverage at knowledge level in a minimum amount of space/preptime • Valuable in content areas that have a lot of facts Disadvantages: • Time consuming for students • Not good for higher levels of learning Tips for Writing Good Matching items: • Need 15 items or less. • Give good directions on basis for matching. • Use items in response column more than once (reduces the effects of guessing). • Use homogenous material in each exercise. • Make all responses plausible. • Put all items on a single page. • Put response in some logical order (chronological, alphabetical, etc.). • Responses should be short.
  • 6. Multiple Choice Good for: • Application, synthesis, analysis, and evaluation levels Types: • Question/Right answer • Incomplete statement • Best answer Advantages: • Very effective • Versatile at all levels • Minimum of writing for student • Guessing reduced • Can cover broad range of content Disadvantages: • Difficult to construct good test items. • Difficult to come up with plausible distractors/alternative responses. Tips for Writing Good Multiple Choice items: • Stem should present single, clearly formulated problem. • Stem should be in simple, understood language; delete extraneous words. • Avoid "all of the above"--can answer based on partial knowledge (if one is incorrect or two are correct, but unsure of the third...). • Avoid "none of the above." • Make all distractors plausible/homoegenous. • Don't overlap response alternatives (decreases discrimination between students who know the material and those who don't). • Don't use double negatives. • Present alternatives in logical or numerical order. • Place correct answer at random (A answer is most often). • Make each item independent of others on test. • Way to judge a good stem: student's who know the content should be able to answer before reading the alternatives • List alternatives on separate lines, indent, separate by blank line, use letters vs. numbers for alternative answers. • Need more than 3 alternatives, 4 is best.
  • 7. Short Answer Good for: • Application, synthesis, analysis, and evaluation levels Advantages: • Easy to construct • Good for "who," what," where," "when" content • Minimizes guessing • Encourages more intensive study-student must know the answer vs. recognizing the answer. Disadvantages: • May overemphasize memorization of facts • Take care - questions may have more than one correct answer • Scoring is laborious Tips for Writing Good Short Answer Items: • When using with definitions: supply term, not the definition-for a better judge of student knowledge. • For numbers, indicate the degree of precision/units expected. • Use direct questions, not an incomplete statement. • If you do use incomplete statements, don't use more than 2 blanks within an item. • Arrange blanks to make scoring easy. • Try to phrase question so there is only one answer possible. Essay Good for: • Application, synthesis and evaluation levels Types: • Extended response: synthesis and evaluation levels; a lot of freedom in answers • Restricted response: more consistent scoring, outlines parameters of responses
  • 8. Advantages: • Students less likely to guess • Easy to construct • Stimulates more study • Allows students to demonstrate ability to organize knowledge, express opinions, show originality. Disadvantages: • Can limit amount of material tested, therefore has decreased validity. • Subjective, potentially unreliable scoring. • Time consuming to score. Tips for Writing Good Essay Items: • Provide reasonable time limits for thinking and writing. • Avoid letting them to answer a choice of questions (You won't get a good idea of the broadness of student achievement when they only answer a set of questions.) • Give definitive task to student-compare, analyze, evaluate, etc. • Use checklist point system to score with a model answer: write outline, determine how many points to assign to each part • Score one question at a time-all at the same time. Oral Exams Good for: • Knowledge, synthesis, evaluation levels Advantages: • Useful as an instructional tool-allows students to learn at the same time as testing. • Allows teacher to give clues to facilitate learning. • Useful to test speech and foreign language competencies. Disadvantages: • Time consuming to give and take. • Could have poor student performance because they haven't had much practice with it. • Provides no written record without checklists.
  • 9. Student Portfolios Good for: • Knowledge, application, synthesis, evaluation levels Advantages: • Can assess compatible skills: writing, documentation, critical thinking, problem solving • Can allow student to present totality of learning. • Students become active participants in the evaluation process. Disadvantages: • Can be difficult and time consuming to grade. Performance Good for: • Application of knowledge, skills, abilities Advantages: • Measures some skills and abilities not possible to measure in other ways Disadvantages: • Can not be used in some fields of study • Difficult to construct • Difficult to grade • Time-consuming to give and take
  • 10. Student Portfolios Good for: • Knowledge, application, synthesis, evaluation levels Advantages: • Can assess compatible skills: writing, documentation, critical thinking, problem solving • Can allow student to present totality of learning. • Students become active participants in the evaluation process. Disadvantages: • Can be difficult and time consuming to grade. Performance Good for: • Application of knowledge, skills, abilities Advantages: • Measures some skills and abilities not possible to measure in other ways Disadvantages: • Can not be used in some fields of study • Difficult to construct • Difficult to grade • Time-consuming to give and take