Strategies For Specific Question Types
You can gain even more confidence in your test-taking abilities by understanding the different kinds of questions an instructor may ask and apply the following proven strategies for answering them. Most instructors will likely use various conventional types of questions. Here are some tips for handling the most common types.
- Read the instructions carefully to determine if there may be more than one right answer.
- If there are multiple right answers, does the instructor expect you to choose just one, or do you need to mark all correct options?
- Read each question carefully and try to answer it in your head before reading the answer options.
- Then consider all the options.
- Eliminate first the options that are clearly incorrect.
- Compare the remaining answers with your own answer before choosing one and marking your paper.
- If you are stuck, treat the remaining answers as True/Fale statements. This often helps pick the correct answer.
- Look for clue words that hint that certain option answers might be correct or incorrect.
- Absolute words like “never,” “always,” “every,” or “none” are rarely found in a correct option.
- Less absolute words like “usually,” “often,” or “rarely” are regularly found in correct options.
- Be on the lookout for the word “not” in the stem phrase and in the answer choice options; it is an easy word to miss if you are reading too quickly, but it completely changes the meaning of the possible statements.
- Skip difficult questions.
- There are often clues in later questions. Or, you may recall information that you had forgotten
- Go back and answer all the questions.
- Do not leave any questions blank, unless there is a penalty for wrong answers (this is often on standardized tests like the SAT and LSAT but rarely on college tests.)
**Used from Creative Commons: Chapter 6: Preparing for and Taking Tests. in College Success. Authored by: Anonymous. Provided by: University of Minnesota. Located at: http://www.oercommons.org/courses/college-success/view. License: CC BY-NC-SA-4.0