Eric Bohlman wrote:
>And furthermore, not all the wrong answers are equally "bad." Someone who
>would answer A or B must know quite a bit less than someone who would
>answer C (in fact, it would tend to indicate that they had no concept at
>all of what the boxplot represented).
I don't believe that making all distractors "equally bad" is a test writting
criterion. In preparing multiple choice distractors the goal is to create
distractors that are plausible. For example in a quantitative question, the
distractors might be the results obtained by dividing by n rather than (n - 1)
or selecting the incorrect number of degrees of freedom. The question writer
is usually expected to be able to explain why the distractors were chosen.
Jim
Stamp out fuzzy thinking.
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