Abstract

Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) are a very well known, traditional and accepted method of assessment. The use of MCQs for testing students has produced numerous debates amongst academics concerning their effectiveness as they are viewed as practical and efficient but also perceived as possibly „too easy‟ and potentially unable to appropriately test the higher order cognitive skills that essay questions can assess.The use of MCQs in a forensic science context is currently being investigated, not only for use within forensic science education, but also for the testing of competency of qualified forensic practitioners. This paper describes a Higher Education Academy funded project that is investigating the design and the implementation of MCQs for testing forensic practitioners and the lessons that have been learnt so far, that will assist academics in the development of robust MCQ assessments within forensic science degrees to promote and assess deep learning.

Highlights

  • Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) – Friend or Foe?? Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) are a type of objective test question which involve an answer(s) to be chosen from a list of possible responses[1]

  • A key debate within MCQ use is the reliability of this assessment method, with critics claiming that they are „too easy‟, they allow students to pass through guesswork and do not test higher order cognitive skills that other assessments such as essays and laboratory write-ups are able to[5, 13]

  • Bloom‟s Taxonomy is commonly simplified to just three levels; knowledge, combined comprehension and application and problem solving[14]

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Summary

New Directions

Claire Gwinnett* and John Cassella** Department of Forensic and Crime Science Faculty of Sciences Mellor Building Staffordshire University College Road Stoke-on-Trent ST42DE. Mike Allen The Forensic Science Society Clarke House 18A Mount Parade Harrogate North Yorkshire HG1 1BX mikejallen.consultant @googlemail.com. The use of MCQs in a forensic science context is currently being investigated, for use within forensic science education, and for the testing of competency of qualified forensic practitioners

The generation of questions which feed from one or more
Testing of Forensic Practitioners
Forensic most interesting
Findings
Conclusions
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