<p>true/false, mult. choice, fill-ins. why?</p>
<p>true/false because they always seem like trick questions to me. I overanalyze them and often switch between answers. Plus, I always guess wrong.</p>
<p>mhm. I agree. I always screw up on the T/F questions.</p>
<p>Same .</p>
<p>True/False is the easiest by far!</p>
<p>You only need to know half the questions for sure and you’ll get a C!</p>
<p>fill-ins cause you can be totally off (like take the ? a different way). Mult choice are the easiest for me! :)</p>
<p>Open answer, maybe.</p>
<p>T/F can be mind-boggling since people tend to vacillate between the two possible answers, and they may feel overwhelmed by the simplicity of the choices and their inability to decide on an answer.
MC are probably the easiest since people can often eliminate choices.
Fill-ins are more open to interpretation; therefore, there may be multiple correct answers.
Generally, I would say T/F just because of the frustration that it imposes on the test takers. XD</p>
<p>The true/false ones where you have to correct the false ones. ****s impossible</p>
<p>If you didn’t study - Fill-ins
If you studied - True/false</p>
<p>^That’s just my perspective though.</p>
<p>Multiple choice questions with a choice like e. none of the above. God it ****es me off so much, like why would you even have a multiple choice then? Is anyone with me?</p>
<p>Agree with wartsandall- if you didn’t study you’re screwed if you have to know specific terms, but if you studied a lot there always seems to be a way to argue for both true and false…overanalyzation I suppose :(</p>
<p>I hope you guys realize that TF is just a type of MC. Generally an easy type.</p>
<p>^I think that it depends on the wording of the questions. I’ve found that I spend more time trying to justify why both answer are correct than why one in particular is incorrect. With multiple choice, the options seem to be more simplistic and evident (if you’ve studied) in comparison to true or false questions because there are more choices.</p>
<p>That’s just something that I’ve found to be true for me though.</p>
<p>Teachers tend to make T/F questions more obscure to make it less easy, but the question type itself is easier</p>
<p>It depends on the teacher and how hard they want to make the test.</p>
<p>I’m going to have to go with fill-ins. If you don’t know the answer, you’re screwed - there’s no 50/50 or 25% chance of getting it or anything. And sometimes, depending on how the question is written, it seems like there could be more than one answer.</p>
<p>essays…</p>