Ps If students declare question ambiguity....they need to provide reworded question that clears up ambiguity..according to our appeal form No reworded question...no appeal Jim Sibley Sorry for brief message -sent from my iPad On 2014-04-01, at 3:59 PM, "Susan Hazel" <[log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>> wrote: Hi All, Yesterday I ran a TBL and for the first time one of my teams when writing the appeal justified it by saying that only 25% of students got that question right, so it must have been ambiguous. I use the Scantron in class so that students can see for each question how they went, and this team has used the information accordingly. I won’t grant this appeal as I think they have to justify why a question was ambiguous, or why the answer was wrong, but wondered if others have had similar experience and how they handled it? Susan Susan Hazel BVSc BSc(Vet) PhD GradCert (Public Health) MANZCVSc Senior Lecturer in Animal Behaviour, Welfare and Ethics School of Animal & Veterinary Sciences THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE Roseworthy SA 5371 Australia Ph : +61 8 8313 7828 Fax : +61 8 8313 7972 e-mail: [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]> CRICOS Provider Number 00123M ----------------------------------------------------------- IMPORTANT: This message may contain confidential or legally privileged information. If you think it was sent to you by mistake, please delete all copies and advise the sender. For the purposes of the SPAM Act 2003, this email is authorised by The University of Adelaide. Think green: read on the screen.