Strategies for Taking Multiple Choice Tests 
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                Multiple choice tests are under-estimated by some students. This is a mistake.    

•  You are looking for the best answer, not only a correct one, & not one which must be true all of the time, in 
all cases, & without exception.    

•  Look for key words in questions. Multiple choice tests examine your ability to read carefully and thoughtfully 
as much as they test your ability to recall and reason. Watch for words like "all," "always," "never," "none," 
"few," "many," some," "sometimes."     

•  Preview The Exam. As you browse through, take note of those questions which seem easier (i.e., those 
questions you think you can answer) & perhaps plan to skip those which seem harder, setting time limits, 
and getting settled; keep to time divisions for questions as they are usually equally weighted;    

•  Start With Questions You Can Answer Readily. Don't waste time labouring over troublesome questions at 
the start. Be sure to get credit for items you know well.     

•  Set Goals For Time & Pace Yourself Accordingly. Allocate your time according to the relative worth of 
questions. Try to save a few minutes at the end for review and revision. Remember: your first answer may not 
always be your best answer. Change answers, but only if you have a good reason for doing so. For instance, 
changing an answer from, say, selection "b" simply because your response to the previous four questions was 
also "b" and you cannot believe that five questions in a row would have the same item as the correct response, 
is likely not a good reason; be flexible in your approach.     

•  Read The Questions Carefully:Twice if necessary. Avoid jumping to conclusions about what you think the 
question asks.    

•  Try To Recall A Concept From Memory or think out the answer before looking at the options. Doing this 
successfully may help you "wade through" the alternatives and find a reasonable answer or choice.     

•  Consider The Cover-Up Strategy, whereby you read the question and try to answer it by recall before looking 
at the alternative answers.    

•  Consider The True/false Label Strategy whereby you label the alternative answers as true or false statements 
and then look for a pattern in the answers.    

•  Sometimes Alternatives Differ By Only One Or Two Words or in the order of one or two terms. These can 
seem very confusing. It helps sometimes to read the stem of the question (that's the question part) with an 
alternative while covering up the others. By methodically thinking through the alternatives this way, you may 
be able to make more sense of the options by labelling them true or false and eliminating those that don't 
correctly complete the question.    

•  Use The Hint Of Highly Similar Pairs -- this says that often the answer is imbedded in one of two very similar 
pairs and the "most correct" answer is often the one that correctly uses course terminology; consider the all or 
none of the above cues -- if two of the preceding alternatives are opposites then one of them and the all or 
none of the above choice is also wrong.    

•  Be Prepared To Change Your Answer if you can determine a clear reason why your first response is incorrect 
-- many students report difficulties arising from changes that are made on the basis of nervous feelings;     

•  Be Alert To Terminology Which Links the alternatives or questions to key areas of the course, lectures, or 
chapters of a course's materials -- this may help you narrow the field of possible choices and think through to 
the best answer.    

•  Be Wary Of Descriptive Words which are overly exclusive or overly inclusive. These absolute terms tend to 
portray things as right or wrong where this is often not the case. Words like always, never, completely, and only 
are absolutes. Relative words like often, usually, seem and may are often more accurate.    

•  Translate Double Negative Statements into positive ones. Examples like "Not lacking" or "not none" become 
"having" and "some" and this can reduce confusion. Note that these are often partly in the stem and partly in the 
choices of a particular question.    

•  If You Must Guess, look for some of these possibilities: the style of an answer option is very different from all 
of the others - this may disqualify it; the grammar of the question stem is not in agreement with the grammar of 
an alternative; some alternative is not in the area or topic of the question, but comes from some other part of 
the course- this may disqualify it.    

•  Recycle Through The Test. Now try the questions you could not do on the first attempt. Sometimes the answer 
will occur to you simply because you are more relaxed after having answered other questions. Sometimes, too, 
your answer to one question provides a clue to the answer of another. 

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                                                           Topics in Psychology 
                                                               Robert C. Gates 

                                            Waste not your Hour, nor in the vain pursuit 
                                          Of This and That endeavour and dispute; 
                                          Better be jocund with the fruitful Grape 
                                          Than sadden after none, or bitter, Fruit. 
  
                                           from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam