Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation

The poster describes how the multiple-choice questions could be a part of learning, not only assessing. We often think of the role of questions only in order to test the student's skills. We have tested how questions could be a part of learning in our web-based course of information retrieval...

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Main Author: Paula Kangasniemi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bergen 2016-12-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Information Literacy in Higher Education
Online Access:https://noril.uib.no/article/view/2482
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spelling doaj-14b5b176950741429e39e6b6941a6e732020-11-25T00:37:08ZengUniversity of BergenNordic Journal of Information Literacy in Higher Education1890-59002016-12-018110.15845/noril.v8i1.250185Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-EvaluationPaula Kangasniemi0Lapland University The poster describes how the multiple-choice questions could be a part of learning, not only assessing. We often think of the role of questions only in order to test the student's skills. We have tested how questions could be a part of learning in our web-based course of information retrieval in Lapland University. In web-based learning there is a need for high-quality mediators. Mediators are learning promoters which trigger, support, and amplify learning. Mediators can be human mediators or tool mediators. The tool mediators are for example; tests, tutorials, guides and diaries. The multiple-choice questions can also be learning promoters which select, interpret and amplify objects for learning. What do you have to take into account when you are preparing multiple-choice questions as mediators? First you have to prioritize teaching objectives: what must be known and what should be known. According to our experience with contact learning, you can assess what the things are that students have problems with and need more guidance on. The most important addition to the questions is feedback during practice. The questions’ answers (wrong or right) are not important. The feedback on the answers are important to guide students on how to search. The questions promote students’ self-regulation and self-evaluation. Feedback can be verbal, a screenshot or a video. We have added a verbal feedback for every question and also some screenshots and eight videos in our web-based course. https://noril.uib.no/article/view/2482
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paula Kangasniemi
spellingShingle Paula Kangasniemi
Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation
Nordic Journal of Information Literacy in Higher Education
author_facet Paula Kangasniemi
author_sort Paula Kangasniemi
title Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation
title_short Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation
title_full Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation
title_fullStr Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Practical Usage of Multiple-Choice Questions as Part of Learning and Self-Evaluation
title_sort practical usage of multiple-choice questions as part of learning and self-evaluation
publisher University of Bergen
series Nordic Journal of Information Literacy in Higher Education
issn 1890-5900
publishDate 2016-12-01
description The poster describes how the multiple-choice questions could be a part of learning, not only assessing. We often think of the role of questions only in order to test the student's skills. We have tested how questions could be a part of learning in our web-based course of information retrieval in Lapland University. In web-based learning there is a need for high-quality mediators. Mediators are learning promoters which trigger, support, and amplify learning. Mediators can be human mediators or tool mediators. The tool mediators are for example; tests, tutorials, guides and diaries. The multiple-choice questions can also be learning promoters which select, interpret and amplify objects for learning. What do you have to take into account when you are preparing multiple-choice questions as mediators? First you have to prioritize teaching objectives: what must be known and what should be known. According to our experience with contact learning, you can assess what the things are that students have problems with and need more guidance on. The most important addition to the questions is feedback during practice. The questions’ answers (wrong or right) are not important. The feedback on the answers are important to guide students on how to search. The questions promote students’ self-regulation and self-evaluation. Feedback can be verbal, a screenshot or a video. We have added a verbal feedback for every question and also some screenshots and eight videos in our web-based course.
url https://noril.uib.no/article/view/2482
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