Pls. refer to the following tips and strategies to assist you with multiple choice questions on reading and/or other tests:
Multiple Choice Test Taking Tips Tips on answering multiple choice questions:
Read the question before you look at the answer.
Come up with the answer in your head before looking at the possible answers, this way the choices given on the test won't throw you off or trick you.
Eliminate answers you know aren't right.
Read all the choices before choosing your answer.
If there is no guessing penalty, always take an educated guess and select an answer.
Don't keep on changing your answer, usually your first choice is the right one, unless you misread the question.
In "All of the above" and "None of the above" choices, if you are certain one of the statements is true don't choose "None of the above" or one of the statements are false don't choose "All of the above".
In a question with an "All of the above" choice, if you see that at least two correct statements, then "All of the above" is probably the answer.
A positive choice is more likely to be true than a negative one.
Usually the correct answer is the choice with the most information.
Strategies for answering difficult questions:
1.Eliminate options you know to be incorrect If allowed, mark words or alternatives in questions that eliminate the option
2.Give each option of a question the "true-false test:" This may reduce your selection to the best answer
3.Question options that grammatically don't fit with the stem
4.Question options that are totally unfamiliar to you
5.Question options that contain negative or absolute words. Try substituting a qualified term for the absolute one.
For example, frequently for always;or typical for every to see if you can eliminate an option
6."All of the above:" If you know two of three options seem correct, "all of the above" is a strong possibility
7.Number answers: toss out the high and low and consider the middle range numbers
8."Look alike options" probably one is correct; choose the best but eliminate choices that mean basically the same thing, and thus cancel each other out
9.Double negatives: Create the equivalent positive statement
10.Echo options: If two options are opposite each other, chances are one of them is correct
11.Favor options that contain qualifiers
The result is longer, more inclusive items that better fill the role of the answer
12.If two alternatives seem correct, compare them for differences,
then refer to the stem to find your best answer
Guessing:
§Always guess when there is no penalty for guessing or you can eliminate options
§Don't guess if you are penalized for guessing and if you have no basis for your choice
§Use hints from questions you know to answer questions you do not.
§Change your first answers when you are sure of the correction, or other cues in the test cue you to change.
Remember that you are looking for the best answer, not only a correct one, and not one which must be true all of the time, in all cases, and without exception.
Pls. refer to the following tips and strategies to assist you with multiple choice questions on reading and/or other tests:
Multiple Choice Test Taking Tips
Tips on answering multiple choice questions:
Strategies for answering difficult questions:
If allowed, mark words or alternatives in questions that eliminate the option
This may reduce your selection to the best answer
- 4. Question options that are totally unfamiliar to you
- 5. Question options that contain negative or absolute words.
- 6. "All of the above:"
- 7. Number answers:
- 8. "Look alike options"
- 9. Double negatives:
- 10. Echo options:
- 11. Favor options that contain qualifiers
- 12. If two alternatives seem correct,
Guessing:Try substituting a qualified term for the absolute one.
For example, frequently for always;or typical for every to see if you can eliminate an option
If you know two of three options seem correct, "all of the above" is a strong possibility
toss out the high and low and consider the middle range numbers
probably one is correct; choose the best but eliminate choices that mean basically the same thing, and thus cancel each other out
Create the equivalent positive statement
If two options are opposite each other, chances are one of them is correct
The result is longer, more inclusive items that better fill the role of the answer
compare them for differences,
then refer to the stem to find your best answer
for guessing or you can eliminate options
and if you have no basis for your choice
to answer questions you do not.
when you are sure of the correction, or other cues in the test cue you to change.
Remember that you are looking for the best answer, not only a correct one, and not one which must be true all of the time, in all cases, and without exception.