How, though, do we go about testing our students? The traditional
long test format has been shown to be updated. Long tests tend to drain
students, create more exam stress, and emphasize studying “for the test”
rather than to learn material.
As an alternative to tests, short quizzes, or shorter-length tests,
allow for students to focus more on concentrated subject areas. The
interactive method of correcting the quizzes immediately upon the
completion of the assessment receives favorable input from students and
teachers alike. Furthermore, quizzes can be re-taken in order to ensure
that a student learns the required material rather than studies for the
big test.
Moreover, as we move further into our "computer age," we are
increasingly dependent on technology as a learning tool. Even notable
research universities such as Harvard have online courseware. And, just
like classroom-based learning, online learning also requires the
assessment of student progress. In fact, online learning actually lends
itself to the use of the kinds of smaller quizzes that many find to be
quite successful.
By reinforcing key ideas presented in a lesson or lecture, short
online quizzes can help a student to individually understand the points
that were possibly presented unclearly by the course instructor or
courseware. The understanding and knowledge gained by taking a quiz
should be individual to the student who attempts to comprehend material.
Most education researchers agree that learning is best accomplished
when the subject matter is closest to the student; for this reason,
traveling to a foreign country is often preferred to the classroom when a
student attempts to learn a foreign language. In a foreign setting, the
student quickly learns and corrects errors. Similarly, online
courseware supported by quiz software can pinpoint a student’s
individual errors and that allows a student to take the quizzes that
would most benefit his learning. This makes for an undeniably personal
learning experience.
To this end, online learning software can also provide customized
feedback and support for a student. Questions that are marked incorrect
are given “explanations,” or customized feedback to the student about
the question and the correct answer. For example, if a student missed
several questions in his practice quiz, his instructor could require
that he reads the explanations for the incorrect questions and then
re-take the quiz to earn a higher score. Such feedback is a unique
feature of online quizzing.
Of course, we’ve been overlooking the most obvious advantage of
online quizzing : the convenience and flexibility that it offers. Online
quizzes can be given at anytime and virtually anywhere that has an
Internet connection. In addition, quiz questions can contain media that
would be difficult to pursue in a “traditional,” classroom context, such
as high-resolution imagery, sound, and video. The ability to employ
media lends itself to teaching real-world, applied learning questions
rather than the dull objective test items that you would come to expect
from a classroom environment.
Long tests still have their place in education; for example, many
instructors use them during mid-terms or finals. However, short quizzes
are a good tool to use in ensuring that a student understands material
and rather than just preparing for the big test. While quizzes are not
the only answer to the educator’s woes, they can be employed to ensure a
personalized, responsive, and interactive learning environment for the
student.
Deepa Singh
Business Developer
Web Site:-http://www.gyapti.com
Blog:- http://gyapti.blogspot.com/
Email Id:-deepa.singh@soarlogic.com
Business Developer
Web Site:-http://www.gyapti.com
Blog:- http://gyapti.blogspot.com/
Email Id:-deepa.singh@soarlogic.com
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