True-False Items presentation

18
TRUE/FALSE TESTS GROUP #3 October 22/2011

description

True-false presentation

Transcript of True-False Items presentation

Page 1: True-False Items presentation

TRUE/FALSE

TESTS

GROUP #3

October 22/2011

Page 2: True-False Items presentation

In the most basic format, true-false questions are those in which a statement is presented and the student indicates in some manner whether the

statement is true or false.

INTRODUCTION

Page 3: True-False Items presentation

True-false questions are well suited for testing student recall or comprehension. Students can generally respond to many questions, covering a lot of content, in a fairly short

amount of time. From the teacher's perspective, these questions can be written quickly and are easy to score.

Skill levels evaluated by True/False tests

Page 4: True-False Items presentation

While true-false and other forced choice questions are generally used to measure knowledge and understanding,

they could also be used at higher levels. The student:

Analyzes a statement Assesses whether true or false Marks an answer

Page 5: True-False Items presentation

Appropriate for all levels of cognitive ability objective Efficient in testing recall and comprehension of a broader content area

relative to other testing strategies Well suited to test recall, comprehension of simple logic or

understanding, as with "if-then" "causal/because" statements Useful for automated scoring Useful for item analysis, internal and over time

Advantages

Page 6: True-False Items presentation

Scoring tends to be high since guessing yields a 50-50 score (half right half wrong) as a base. i.e. if there are 100 items, and the student knows the correct answer to 50, and guesses on the other half, the score will be 75 knowing only half the material.

Since the stem can cue a correct answer, guessing is enhanced without really understanding the question

The format does not provide diagnostic information on why a student got it wrong

It may be easy to cheat

LIMITATIONS

Page 7: True-False Items presentation
Page 8: True-False Items presentation

Because random guessing will produce the correct answer half the time, true-false tests are less reliable than other types of exams. However, these items are appropriate for occasional use. Some faculty who use

true-false questions add an "explain" column in which students write one or two sentences justifying their response.

Words like "sometimes, often, frequently, ordinarily, generally" open

up the possibilities of making accurate statements. They make more modest claims, are more likely to reflect reality, and usually indicate "true" answers.

Why do students tend to answer True or False?

Page 9: True-False Items presentation

Every part of a true sentence must be "true" If any part of the sentence is false, the whole sentence is false despite many other true statements.

Absolute words restrict possibilities. "No, never, none, always, every, entirely, only" imply the statement must be true 100% of the time and usually indicate "false" answers

Page 10: True-False Items presentation
Page 11: True-False Items presentation

Research indicates that students tend to mark "true" when guessing blindly, thus false items discriminate better between high and low ability students. At the same time, students tend to quickly pick up on patterns of responding. To prevent response-bias and effectively assess understanding, instructors should include an equivalent number of true and false items within the assessment.

Why should be the True/False questions ratio?

Page 12: True-False Items presentation

To prevent rote memorization of trivial facts or general knowledge, avoid using exact wording from the textbook. A well-designed true-false item is very effective for assessing the accuracy of statements,

understanding of definitions, and novel applications of theories or principles.

Page 13: True-False Items presentation

Statements should be relatively short and simple. True statements should be about the same length as

false statements. (There is a tendency to add details in true statements to make them more precise.)

The answers should not be obvious to students who don't know the material.

Some tips in reference to True or False tests:

Page 14: True-False Items presentation

Be sure to include directions that tell students how and where to mark their responses.

Finally, arrange the statements so that there is no discernible pattern of answers (such as T, F, T, F, T, F and T, T, F, F, T, T, F, F) for True and False statements.

Avoid Unfamiliar vocabulary and concepts Long strings of statements Ambiguous statements and generalizations

Page 15: True-False Items presentation

T F Poor: "The Raven" was written by Edgar Allen Poe.

T F Better: "The Raven" was written by Edgar Allan Poe.

T F Poor: The square of the hypotenuse of a right triangle equals the sum of the squares of the other two sides.

T F Better: If the hypotenuse of an isosceles right triangle is 7 inches, each of the two equal sides must be more than 5 inches.

EXAMPLES

Page 16: True-False Items presentation

True/False tests can be used for different skill levels and they measure knowledge and

understanding as well as students recalling information.

CONCLUSION

Page 17: True-False Items presentation
Page 18: True-False Items presentation

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION

GOD BLESS YOU!