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The Future of Online Testing with MOOCs: An Exploratory Analysis of Current Practice
1. The Future of Online Testing with
MOOCs: An Exploratory Analysis of
Current Practice
Eamon Costello (National Institute for Digital Learning, Dublin City University)
Jane Holland (Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland)
Mark Brown (National Institute for Digital Learning, Dublin City University)
2. Background
• NIDL - DCU and Funded MOOC research
– MOOCs and building regional capacities
SCORE2020 Project
– HOME Project
• MOOCs and the Media
• Institutional Drivers
6. Brightest MOOC Futures
Dillenbourg, P. (2015) Proposal for a Digital Education Strategy for Flanders Universities.
“Thinkers in Residence” Programme from KVAB
Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie van België voor Wetenschappen en Kunsten. Available from:
http://www.kvab.be/denkersprogramma/files/DP_BlendedLearning_No-time-to-lose.pdf
“Sooner or later,
online tests will be
as reliable or even
more reliable than
on campus exams”
7. Current State of Play
• The future is taken care of
• But what about the present?
– How mature are (x)MOOCs?
– How reliable and valid are MCQ type tests in
MOOCs?
8. Multiple Choice Question (MCQ) Tests
(Single Best Answer)
– Reliability:
If we repeated this would we get the
same result?
- Validity:
Are we measuring what we think we
are?
Don’t get
“fooled by
randomness”
Taleb, N. (2004). Fooled by randomness: The hidden role of chance in life and
in the markets. Random House Incorporated.
9. Best Practice
Case, S. M., & Swanson, D. B. (2003). Constructing written test questions for the basic
and clinical sciences (3rd ed.). Philadelphia, PA: National Board of Medical Examiners.
10. • Ambiguous or unclear information
• Negative worded stem (not, incorrect, except)
• Implausible distracters
• Gratuitous information in stem
• More than one or no correct answer
• Longest option is correct
• Logical cues in stem
• Word repeats in stem and correct answer
• Unfocused stem
• True/false question
• Use of all of the above
• Vague terms (sometimes, frequently)
• Absolute terms (never, always)
• Use of none of the above
• Fill-in-blank
• Complex or K-type
• Grammatical cues in sentence completion
• Convergence cues
Best Practice
Tarrant, M., Knierim, A., Hayes, S. K., & Ware, J. (2006). The frequency of item writing
flaws in multiple-choice questions used in high stakes nursing assessments. Nurse
Education Today, 26(8), 662-671
11. • Ambiguous or unclear information
• Negative worded stem (not, incorrect, except)
• Implausible distracters
• Gratuitous information in stem
• More than one or no correct answer
• Longest option is correct
• Logical cues in stem
• Word repeats in stem and correct answer
• Unfocused stem
• True/false question
• Use of all of the above
• Vague terms (sometimes, frequently)
• Absolute terms (never, always)
• Use of none of the above
• Fill-in-blank
• Complex or K-type
• Grammatical cues in sentence completion
• Convergence cues
• Position of correct option
Best Practice
Tarrant, M., Knierim, A., Hayes, S. K., & Ware, J. (2006). The frequency of item writing
flaws in multiple-choice questions used in high stakes nursing assessments. Nurse
Education Today, 26(8), 662-671
12. Methodology
• Use Tarrant et. al. (2004)’s diagnostic tool to
analyse MCQs in MOOC systematically
• Look for item writing flaws
13. The Data
• 12 Courses
– from six MOOC platforms
– From 12 Universities/Providers
• Total MCQs: 115
14. None/All of the Above
• None of the above: 1 (0.87%)
• All of the above: 2 (1.74%)
The kernel is defined as:
A. The graphical user interface on top of the operating system
B. The glue between hardware and software applications
C. the software libraries need to run the system
D. all of the above
Holsgrove, G., & Elzubeir, M. (1998). Imprecise terms in UK medical multiple‐choice
questions: what examiners think they mean. Medical Education, 32(4), 343-350.
15. Number of Correct Options per
Question
• Greater than 1 correct: 10 (8.7%)
• Average: 1.39
Check the words that are used synonymously in a
JMeter test plan
A. end users
B. virtual users
C. concurrent users
D. threads
16. Number of Options per Question
Greater than 4 options: 9 (8%)
Average: 3.77
2%
6%
17%
68%
6%
2%
0
20
40
60
80
1 option 2 options 3 options 4 options 5 options 7 options
17. Correction Option is the Longest
• In 47 of the 115 MCQs the correct option is
the longest (40.87%)
20. Overall
• 17 (14.78%) all the questions contain a
defined item writing flaw
• When counting only four item writing flaws
• Two more item writing flaws are apparent in
characteristics that appear more often than
they should be chance (small sample)
21. Further work
Add qualitative analysis using the Tarrant et. al. (2004) evaluation tool
• Ambiguous or unclear information
• Negative worded stem (not, incorrect, except)
• Implausible distracters
• Gratuitous information in stem
• Logical cues in stem
• Word repeats in stem and correct answer
• Unfocused stem
• Vague terms (sometimes, frequently)
• Absolute terms (never, always)
• Fill-in-blank
• Complex or K-type
• Grammatical cues in sentence completion
• Convergence cues
22. Implications
• Validity and Reliability of MOOC Testing
• Replicating unsound pedagogies
• MOOC teachers/developers need evidence-
lead teaching