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  • Essay Test Questions

    I hate them so much!!!

    Typically at my school, tests are multiple choice. Some may have some short answer (one sentense or less) or maybe simple equations if it's math or science, but they are typically quick, straight forward, and not too difficult to study for.

    Well then you get the oddball professor who loves to torture students with long essay questions, I'm talking 2 to 3 pages of writting for each test!! Now I actually enjoy writting essays, but not from stuff I have to memorize! And with such little time to not only write the essays, but complete the other questions as well, it's a wonder anyone even gets all of it done in time. I know I've had to skip some parts just to save time (and my sanity).

    If you're going to have essay questions, at least make it open book or take home. That way, I don't have to write my essays from pure memory, nor do I feel rushed. I really hope I don't get any more professors who like essay questions cause they would probably be the only one in the class who does.

  • #2
    Essay questions are the best way to test a student's understanding of the material. All a multiple choice test encourages is rote memorization. Trust me, I would rather give my students multiple choice tests, as essay tests take much, MUCH longer to grade. But that actually does them a disservice, since they can get away with just memorizing some facts that then they can forget the next day. An essay test requires a deeper knowledge and understanding of a subject, and therefore promotes better learning. (You know, learning, the purpose of going to college.) And yes, you should be able to do this in a classroom, without notes, and in a certain period of time.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by AdminAssistant View Post
      Essay questions are the best way to test a student's understanding of the material.
      Exactly. As my Tai Chi teacher said today, "Anyone can memorize some facts or names." If you can't explain it, you don't actually know it. Teachers who give essays where the topics aren't given in advance are rough. Luckily my history teacher gives us the topics a week in advance and we only have to do one of the three. Some people try to memorize the entire essay they want and I think they are making it too hard on themselves. Just memorize the main points/answers and turn them into sentences.
      Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers

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      • #4
        I didn't mind short response ones where they wanted maybe a paragraph or two. and they only had two or three essay questions on the test because well some courses you really didn't have enough time for even that many if you had 40 other questions to also answer in 90min

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        • #5
          I agree with GreenDay and Admin. My philosophy professor does this. We only have 52 minutes to complete the test and we also have to do multiple choice,true/false, short answer, and an essay. Plus, he is very picky.

          Maybe you can try doing the essay part first, then go back and do the rest of the test?
          "It's after Jeopardy, so it is my bed time."- Me when someone made a joke about how "old" I am.

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          • #6
            I for one love essay questions. It's easier to get credit for being CLOSE to right, even if you don't get all the way there. Most teachers will grade the entire content of the essay, not just your final conclusion. And, as was the case a couple of times when I was in college, you completely disagree with the question, you can get credit for explaining why, as long as you back it up.

            And if worse comes to worse, you can at least get SOME credit for BSing your way through :: ).

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Fryk View Post
              And if worse comes to worse, you can at least get SOME credit for BSing your way through :: ).
              Yep. Essay tests give me a lot of leniency in grading. We're given a basic rubric by our professor to go by, but it's mostly up to us (he checks a couple of our exams at random to make sure we're on track).

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              • #8
                I can BS an essay question and convince the prof that Neil Armstrong bounced the Moon like a basketball but I can't do that on multiple choice.
                Jack Faire
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                • #9
                  Yeah, I'm a mixed bag on it. Why? Well, I like it because you can explain things from your own perspective. More than a couple of teachers I had basically told us that if you don't agree with the material as it's presented, then in your essay, explain why you don't agree with it and cite your source. It made for some very interesting results and not only encouraged people to think, but also to question the world around them.

                  On the other hand, while my local school standards were relatively loose on the subject grading, they were incredibly tight on the essay structure. More than a few classmates came out with better grades than I because while from a subject perspective the essay was crap, from an essay structure perspective, it was nearly perfect. "A well written piece of shit" as one teacher put it.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Fryk View Post
                    I for one love essay questions. It's easier to get credit for being CLOSE to right, even if you don't get all the way there. Most teachers will grade the entire content of the essay, not just your final conclusion. And, as was the case a couple of times when I was in college, you completely disagree with the question, you can get credit for explaining why, as long as you back it up.

                    And if worse comes to worse, you can at least get SOME credit for BSing your way through :: ).
                    Well that's true, I usually get some credit for knowing the basics. The problem is that these essays expect expert knowledge in the topic. I'm glad you have a choice, but in this case, it's not a wide range of choices and you never know what it's gonna be on. (that's what drives me nuts about studying for tests).

                    That's why I think multiple choices are usually better. As long as they aren't on trivial things and focus on the main points of what you're learning, you can easily study and pass. These essay tests are a bitch because it requires knowing too many specifics as examples. Yes, I've had that problem with MC tests as well, but mostly with essays. There is only so much I can remember. If the essays were more broad, they wouldn't be as hard, but in my case, they require too many specifics.

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                    • #11
                      I guess it all boils down to the prof, and their preferences. If you DARE to disagree with some of them, they'll express their dismay in grade form. And the thing I can't stand AT ALL is the prof who thinks that how much is on the page counts for as much as the thought behind it. If I can make a well-reasoned argument in one page, covering all my arguments and backing them up, WHO cares how long it is???

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                      • #12
                        The length thing is what gets me. I don't always need to write 4 pages to sum up my idea. Do they really want me to write another page of filler just to make it 4 pages long?

                        What gets me about these particular essays are that each essay includes 5 questions and all of them demand examples. While I got some leeway, it wasn't much and there were specific things that needed to be memorized. Believe me, I wasn't the only student who had problems with these. The student who was probably the best and most knowledgable one in the class had explained that he couldn't get all the essays done because they were too much. The instructer herself had to cut down on some of them because everyone struggled with the first test.

                        Another minor rant are those damn blue books. Sure, they only cost 30-50 cents, but they are so unnecessary. Why do I need to make a special trip to buy paper stappled together when I have my own? It's just an unnecessary expenditure.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Rageaholic View Post

                          Another minor rant are those damn blue books. Sure, they only cost 30-50 cents, but they are so unnecessary. Why do I need to make a special trip to buy paper stappled together when I have my own? It's just an unnecessary expenditure.
                          See those made sense when the teacher was the only one that could buy those and passed them out at the beginning of the exam to make sure you weren't cheating by having written anything beforehand now they are pointless.
                          Jack Faire
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                          • #14
                            Most of my tests have been essay with the exception of a few. Seriously, its collage, not high school. Your suppose to know this stuff. Spend endless nights studying it so that you know it better then the back of your hand.

                            It's not easy by any scretch of the mind. I thought I would go crazy over trying to memorize every freaking part of the human heart, functions, names of parts, be able to put it together from memory, right down to each indvindial freaking papillary layer. But hey, that was over two weeks. That's not including the several page reports I had to do for another class, and the other resource paper I had to write on different companies and such.

                            I never had easy time at school. Just don't have the brains for it. But I been able to keep up with pretty much straight A's mostly.

                            So If i can freaking do it, anyone can.
                            Toilet Paper has been "bath tissue" for the longest time, and it really chaps my ass - Blas
                            I AM THE MAN of the house! I wear the pants!!! But uh...my wife buys the pants so....yeah.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Fryk View Post
                              the thing I can't stand AT ALL is the prof who thinks that how much is on the page counts for as much as the thought behind it. If I can make a well-reasoned argument in one page, covering all my arguments and backing them up, WHO cares how long it is???
                              This is the exact reasoning my Philosophy Prof has. He says that length doesn't matter, to an extent. If it is only one paragraph, obviously the argument is not developed by any means.

                              What is weird though, is that I had more essay questions on tests in High School than now, in College (thus far). I love how over-hyped teachers got about preparing for us for college and it hasn't been as bad as they said, so far. But then again, I've always been a school type of person, so I'm just in my preferred environment, I guess.
                              "It's after Jeopardy, so it is my bed time."- Me when someone made a joke about how "old" I am.

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