What you are describing is a byproduct of the anti-testing movement, I
think.

I agree with you in part, and disagree with you in part.  For the most
part, the agreement and disagreement involve different parts.  

I agree that, for the most part it is students who are poor students
(poor study skills and inadequate study time and skills) who make the
claim.  

Test taking, however, does involve a number of skills that might be
considered at least partially independent of study skills.  There are
also test-taking attitudes that are involved.  

I am addressing multiple choice testing only.  That is what I use and am
most familiar with.  I think mc tests can be as good at assessing the
acquisition of information as essay questions, if they are properly
done.

One skill that I am thinking of in particular is the ability to maintain
mental flexibility -- to hold several "what ifs ..." in mind at the same
time while the question is being considered.

Also, many students seem to have not learned the "tricks of the trade". 
I direct them to their Study Guides and some of the sites on my "Study
Skills" page ( http://www.tulsa.oklahoma.net/~jnichols/skills.html ). 
It may be woefully out of date, but there are several outstanding
sites.  Most of them also have tips on taking tests.   (Consider that to
be a thinly veiled invitation to Tipsters to recommend other good sites
they know about.)

And, finally, many seem to have had teachers who have used the kinds of
questions that I call "give-aways".  The distractors are so obviously
wrong that the correct answer is the only possibility (example, Columbus
discovered the Americas in 1425 BC, 1492, 1962, 2002).  In my always
humble opinion, there must always be at least one distractor that is a
plausible answer except for something fairly distinct that the student
should be expected to know.  (I am thinking of something like the
amnestic characteristic that usually distinguishes "night terrors" from
regular nightmares in children.)

Beth Benoit wrote:
> 
> As the winter term ends, I'm once again faced with the confident, unshaken
> belief by some students that they "just don't test well."  This phrase seems
> to have become very well-known and is most certainly over-used.
> 
> I'm skeptical that such a condition exists.
> 
> I think that there's probably no specific reason why a person who is bright,
> well-studied, and has the expected amount of academic ability and language
> skills (taking a test in a second language would be a different kind of
> challenge, for example) would routinely do poorly on a test because they
> have some anomaly - genetic or otherwise - that makes them unable to
> demonstrate their brilliance on a test.
> 
> I'm not referring to people with anxiety disorders or phobias or learning
> disorders.  The "poor test-takers" in my experience are students who just
> whip that phrase out as though it's a personality characteristic, and I'm
> tired of it.  They often announce this even before the first test.  An
> apparent expectation is that I should create some magical test that will
> demonstrate the brilliance that lies deep in the soul of this untestable.
> 
> I don't mean for this to get into another one of those endless diatribes,
> with the same posters replying and arguing with each other about whether
> tests are the perfect collegiate vehicle while the rest of us drum our
> fingers and click on the delete key.
> 
> I'm more inclined to believe that having failed to learn good study skills
> seems a more likely description to me than that the hapless student is
> saddled with some cognitive defect.
> 
> Send me something.  (Just kidding.)
> 
> Beth Benoit
> University System of New Hampshire
> 
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Sometimes you just have to try something, and see what happens.

John W. Nichols, M.A.
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Tulsa Community College
909 S. Boston Ave., Tulsa, OK  74119
(918) 595-7134

Home: http://www.tulsa.oklahoma.net/~jnichols
MegaPsych: http://www.tulsa.oklahoma.net/~jnichols/megapsych.html

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