Why I Don’t Use Multiple Choice Questions

Creating and administering tests is used as an important gauge of student learning by teachers, parents, and administrators.  It’s not the only way, but it’s probably the most common.  In my classroom, when I have to give a test or quiz, I do not use multiple choice, ever.  And here’s why:

Why I Dont Use Multiple Chioce

  1. Multiple choice requires less thought.  With short answer, students cannot guess.  They don’t have clues for the process of elimination.  Plus, with well written questions, they’ll also be using support for their answer, which is not even possible with multiple choice questions.  I like to make them prove their answer.  This makes them think and provide support, which are important in the classroom and beyond.
  2. In ELA, there is not always one right answer.  Making them think rather than pick steps away from using one right answer or interpretation, moving more into creating meaning and thinking critically.  Higher level thinking, yo.
  3. Requires me to be selective with my questions.  Short answer take longer to grade than multiple choice.  So, to offset, I work to generally pick questions that are the best– ones that address specific concepts from the text (say, drawing attention to use of a literary concept or event in the text) or those that require greater thinking and support.
  4. Too easy to cheat.  Copying a single letter or circle on a classmate’s work is very easy.  I at least want them to work for it (and maybe on reading their classmates answer to copy will mean some information sneaks in).  And since many of my students in alternative ed address their for credit, rather than learning, I have to be cognizant of the draw of cheating to just get that credit.
  5. Too hard to catch cheaters.  Many of my students don’t copy all the answers from a classmates.  Only some.  That means that usually have enough difference between papers to look coincidental.  More so if they have parents who think they’re kid can do no wrong– those differences become the focus and the vindication.
    –>With short answer questions, I can compare word choice, word order, order of ideas, and even spelling to build a case.  I also grade by laying answer sheets side by side and grading all question 1, then all question 2– this method really makes it easy to catch those “similar” answers.  I read another like it 2 second ago and can find it easily again.

Of course, several of these things are a big factor in why I much prefer projects and activities rather than tests.  But at least if I have to give a test, I can make it model the reading and discussion questions done in class by using short answer and allowing access to the texts read.  It’s something.

Posted in Assessment, Secondary Education, Teaching, Testing, Uncategorized | Tagged | 1 Comment

5 Creepy Short Stories for Halloween

Short stories area  great way to work in different themes or study of different literary devices.  And the holidays can provide some nice tie-ins, even at the secondary level. Here are some of my favorites that fit well around Halloween– and beyond.

Creepy Short Stories for Halloween

1. The Monkey’s Paw— a cautionary tale of using wishes or trying to change one’s fate.  Great to discuss how wishes are treated in literature, especially when compared to the wishes in the original Aladdin. (Click here for more ideas and activities for teaching The Monkey’s Paw).

2. The Raven— dark, brooding tale told in poem.  Great for studying narrative poems and analogies.  Reading aloud really seems to show the change in pace and tone as the raven torments the narrator. (Click here for more ideas and activities for teaching The Raven)

3. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow— classic tale of the headless horseman chasing poor Ichabod.  A ghost story or a story of a prank?  Great for study of foreshadowing and mood.  (Click here to read more ideas and activities for teaching Sleepy Hollow)

4. The Cask of Amontillado— creepy story of revenge.  Great for discussing an unreliable narrator, foreshadowing, and symbolism.

5. The Tell Tale Heart– horrifying tale of murder and guilt.  Another for an unreliable narrator and the symbol of the eye.

Creepy and scary stories have held our imagination for years.  Halloween is one great time to discuss or explore why.
What’s your favorite creepy or scary story to read or teach?

Once Halloween has passed, and we slip into November, there is the added challenge of engaging while students are distracted by the allure of the upcoming break.  Click here to read about 5 ways to survive the last days before Thanksgiving, and still engage in learning.

 

Posted in Holidays, Short Stories, Teaching, Teaching Ideas, Uncategorized | Tagged | 5 Comments

5 Activities for LSSU’s Annual Banished Words List

Each year, Lake State Superior University gathers and releases their Banished Words list.  Selecting overused and worn out words from the lexicon to be done away with and spare our ears/ eyes.  Of course, it’s just good fun.  Here are some ways to bring that Banned Words List into the ELA classroom for fun and analysis.

Activities for LSSU's Annual Banned Words List v2

  1. Analyze or debate why and how words end up being overused.  Who perpetuates it?  Why?
  2. Pick 5(or more) words to support banning.  Explain why and offer replacements.  Plus, Pick 5 (or more) words to defend.  Why should they be kept.  What are alternatives– and why aren’t those alternatives good enough?
  3. “Nominate” 2 or 3 words or phrases that do not appear on the list.  Vote as a class on the top words.  (Bonus: Check the “Complete List” to see if any of those words or phrases were nominated in previous years and are still overused.)
  4. Write an essay or create a multimedia project about banned and overused words and how they relate to the evolution of language.  (Bonus: Look back at words that Shakespeare added to the language!)
  5. Write and illustrate gravestones for banned words.  Plus write short obituaries to go with the gravestones.  How would a word “die” or use the word as a character and kill them creatively. Synonyms could be the surviving relatives.
Posted in Fun Projects, Secondary Education, Secondary Writing, Teaching, Teaching Ideas, Uncategorized | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Why I Use Holiday Themed Materials in the Secondary Classroom

  1. Teenagers are still big kids. Especially in middle school and early high school.  Halloween is a great opportunity for scary and creepy stories and discussing the fun in being scared.
  2. Even if the holiday material is in line with current lessons, it still feels like a break. It’s always nice to take a break.  One strategy I’ve used is to make it seem like it’s unplanned.  “Oh, we finished that other story early, so instead of starting something new before Christmas Break, let’s just do a Christmas Carol.”  They feel like they’re getting a break or a bonus, while I’ve long ago planned it to fit at that point.Why I Use Holiday Themed Materials in the Secondary Classroom
  3. I can usually use it to slip in a movie or movie clip, which can help engage students otherwise distracted by a holiday or a break.  The Disney version of “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” is a fun one, especially when compared to the Washington Irving story.  The short week before Thanksgiving is one great place to use a movie for engagement– and learning.
  4. By recognizing the holidays, it makes our classroom feel less isolated from the rest of the world.  In the secondary school, holiday decorations and celebrations may be minimal or absent.  Having been there, it makes things seem separate from the rest of the world rather than part of the world.  Makes the student analogies about school being a prison a little too accurate that way.  A few holiday or seasonal pieces of literature work nicely as a tie in– from Christmas Carol song literary analysis during the weeks of being inundated with them to Snow Themed poetry when the world is blanketed,  it’s nice to feel connected.
  5. It’s nice for me, too, to shift gears and do something special for a day or so. Even if it’s planned, it still feels like a break.  Because these activities or stories are short and not necessarily part of a larger unit, they tend to have something of a different feel.  Short and sweet, I suppose– like writing about Easter Candy (which is also a perfect excuse to bring in some Easter treats in those days before Easter/ Spring Break.)
Posted in Holidays, Secondary Education, Teaching | 2 Comments