True or False/Yes or No (let’s face it, they were the same thing) was as good as multiple choice. Actually better since you had a fifty percent chance of getting it right if you didn’t know the question and most multiple choice questions I saw were either three possible choices or four possible choices, meaning either about a 33.33% chance of getting it right or a 25% chance of getting it right. Course when you look at the margin for error True or False was still better than multiple choice as it had a lower margin for error at 50% compared to about 66.66% to 75% for multiple choice. Fill in the blank was always the hardest if you didn’t know the question since there was no margin for error. You either got it right or got it wrong. Never really understood how they could grade opinion questions. Now opinion questions that asked you to back up your opinion with stuff from the lesson plan I get because that’s really just asking you to show that you paid attention. But just plain question I’ll never understand.
True or False/Yes or No (let’s face it, they were the same thing) was as good as multiple choice. Actually better since you had a fifty percent chance of getting it right if you didn’t know the question and most multiple choice questions I saw were either three possible choices or four possible choices, meaning either about a 33.33% chance of getting it right or a 25% chance of getting it right. Course when you look at the margin for error True or False was still better than multiple choice as it had a lower margin for error at 50% compared to about 66.66% to 75% for multiple choice. Fill in the blank was always the hardest if you didn’t know the question since there was no margin for error. You either got it right or got it wrong. Never really understood how they could grade opinion questions. Now opinion questions that asked you to back up your opinion with stuff from the lesson plan I get because that’s really just asking you to show that you paid attention. But just plain question I’ll never understand.