Originally Posted by llg
The important thing is the QUALITY of the questions, not the number of them. I've had final exams for whole semester-long courses that were only 2 or 3 essay questions -- and felt it was a fair exam.
I have no problem with this as that type of exam IS comprehensive.
And the NCLEX can be passed with only 75 questions.
I can see WHY schools have encouraged this type of testing but I'm not convinced it's useful to apply NCLEX style testing across the board.
The NCLEX is specially designed to "adapt" to students' performance on each succeeding question. I'm assuming rigorous statistical testing was done to determine the minimum number of increasingly difficult questions selected by a programmed formula based on previous questions answered that reflected a passing score on a the longer, paper NCLEX.
That is VERY different than an instructor giving a hand out test with a set number of pre-determined questions.
I'd think it could useful to have a two-part test for students. One part could be a comprehensive test with straight forward questions testing student retention and comprehension of target material. A second part could be the "NCLEX-prep" portion. The questions in this portion would represent a sample of the type of question they may see on a given topic on the NCLEX and give students a chance to become familiar with this testing style.
To ONLY test with NCLEX style questions doesn't seem a very effective way to evaluate student retention and comprehension of course content.
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