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Wed, 11 May 2011 15:42:12 -0500 |
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I noticed something unusual in a couple of the
IRAT answer cards made by Epstein Learning and am
interested in this group's reaction to this:
1. In one card, the distribution of correct answers is
A-5, B-8, C-14, D-9, E-14
2. In another card, a consecutive string of answers is:
A E A C A D A D A D A E A C
In particular, card 2 strikes me as problematic: I think
students tend to fret when they start seeing patterns. Plus,
it's hard to write questions where A is the correct choice
every other time. For example, I often ask questions
followed by, say, three statements (I, II, III)
and then have students choose A. I; B. II; C. I and III;
D. I and II; E. all the above.
In the case of card 1, where E is often "None of the Above,"
I would have to start putting this option in another
location, which strikes me as rather contrived.
I emailed Epstein Learning about this and they said the answers
are generated randomly. As a statistician, I have no reason to
doubt this statement. But a random sequence of the 5 letters doesn't
necessarily mean it's an optimal sequence of answers for a multiple
choice test.
--Laura
*******************************************
Laura Chihara
Professor of Mathematics 507-222-4065 (office)
Dept of Mathematics 507-222-4312 (fax)
Carleton College
1 North College Street
Northfield MN 55057
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