Questions play a crucial role in confirming knowledge, checking learning has taken place, and they serve as a learning tool.
Creating effective assessment questions involves understanding various question types, using Bloom’s Taxonomy, and adhering to specific guidelines. In this article, we’ll explore how to develop effective assessment questions.
This article comes from our recent webinar (slide deck available here)
There are several question types, each with a specific utility, including multiple-choice, true or false, short-answer, essay, fill-in-the-blank (Cloze), matching, ranking, hotspot, drag/drop, case studies and scenarios, practical or performance-based tasks, and oral questions.
Each question type tests different aspects of a student’s knowledge, comprehension, and application of concepts. Understanding the purpose of each question type will help you create effective assessment questions that align with the learning objectives.
In the webinar recording (at around 13m 30seconds) you will see we explore some examples of good and poor questions.
A good question is concise, clear, focused, and uses appropriate terminology. It should address key concepts and be relevant to real-world situations. On the other hand, a poorly worded question can be vague, informal, and confusing. Poor questions may also be trivial, subjective, ambiguous, or have spelling and grammar errors.
When developing questions from units of competency, avoid simply adding “how would you…” or “what are the…” to the performance criteria and knowledge evidence. Instead, consider the application of knowledge and create questions that follow performance, using the provided examples as guidance.
There are many ways to create a good assessment question, and the sentence structure can vary. Though having a formula can be useful to help consider they key parts of a good question.
Here’s a formula which may help you structuring questions:
Here’s how it works:
When applied in an example it might look like this:
“Explain how [question phrasing] the process of photosynthesis [subject] converts light energy into chemical energy [action or context] in plants, [specific detail or focus] focusing on the roles of chlorophyll and cellular organelles [clarifying information].”
Bloom’s Taxonomy is a hierarchical classification of cognitive skills that can help in creating assessment questions. The six levels are:
Use the verbs in the performance criteria to guide the creation of questions that target different levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Do you want a free checklist you can use to review your assessment questions before you use them to assess students?
You can either download this as a Word Document (DOCX) or if you use Google Workspace Docs, simply go here then ‘File > Make a Copy’.
Learn more about our TAEDEL501 Facilitate E-Learning Micro-credential.
Marion, a successful Accellier Certificate IV in Training and Assessment graduate tells her story.
Qualified visual arts trainer videoOne of the managers John Morriss added that one of the best aspects of the course was the use of real life examples that were relevant to his industry and role.
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