Students' experiences in studying for multiple choice question examinations
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Studies in Higher Education
- Vol. 19 (3) , 267-279
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03075079412331381870
Abstract
A sample of 190 first- and second-year university students from three courses in two faculties completed questionnaires on their general orientations to learning (classified as deep, surface or achieving), their perceptions of the skills and abilities being assessed by multiple choice question (MCQ) examinations and the study strategies (either deep or surface) they intended to employ for their forthcoming MCQ examinations. The above variables were analysed in relation both to one another and to outcome based on their performance in the examination. Results revealed an association between achievement and deep and/or achieving general, but not surface, orientations to study. Students with surface general orientations to study, in contrast, appear to have a confused perception of MCQ examinations and no planned strategies with which to prepare for them, suggesting that they are passive and unreflective about their studies. Suggestions are included for improving learning in higher education institutions and encouraging students to be more actively involved in their learning.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experiences of understanding in revising for degree examinationsLearning and Instruction, 1992
- Student failure: Disintegrated patterns of study strategies and perceptions of the learning environmentHigher Education, 1991
- Approaches to learning, evaluations of teaching, and preferences for contrasting academic environmentsHigher Education, 1990
- Assessment and the promotion of academic valuesStudies in Higher Education, 1990
- Approaches to the Enhancement of Tertiary TeachingHigher Education Research & Development, 1989
- THE ROLE OF METALEARNING IN STUDY PROCESSESBritish Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
- The effect of assessments and examinations on the learning of medical studentsMedical Education, 1983
- Individual differences in study processes and the Quality of Learning OutcomesHigher Education, 1979
- A comparison of multiple-choice tests and free-response tests in examinations of clinical competenceMedical Education, 1979
- ON QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCES IN LEARNING—II OUTCOME AS A FUNCTION OF THE LEARNER'S CONCEPTION OF THE TASKBritish Journal of Educational Psychology, 1976