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Misinformation,partial knowledge and guessing in true/false tests
Authors:Burton Richard F
Affiliation:Thomson Laboratory, Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK. R.F.Burton@bio.gla.ac.uk
Abstract:CONTEXT: Examiners disagree on whether or not multiple choice and true/false tests should be negatively marked. Much of the debate has been clouded by neglect of the role of misinformation and by vagueness regarding both the specification of test types and "partial knowledge" in relation to guessing. Moreover, variations in risk-taking in the face of negative marking have too often been treated in absolute terms rather than in relation to the effect of guessing on test unreliability. OBJECTIVES: This paper aims to clarify these points and to compare the ill-effects on test reliability of guessing and of variable risk-taking. METHODS: Three published studies on medical students are examined. These compare responses in true/false tests obtained with both negative marking and number-right scoring. The studies yield data on misinformation and on the extent to which students may fail to benefit from distrusted partial knowledge when there is negative marking. A simple statistical model is used to compare variations in risk-taking with test unreliability due to blind guessing under number-right scoring conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Partial knowledge should be least problematic with independent true/false items. The effect on test reliability of blind guessing under number-right conditions is generally greater than that due to the over-cautiousness of some students when there is negative marking.
Keywords:Education, medical/*standards    *educational measurement    misinformation    reproducibility of results
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