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Title
Multiple-choice questions
Category
general
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361cd444c4854a6cbb7314b49d677dfd
Source URL
https://teachwell.auckland.ac.nz/assessment/tests-exams/mcq/
Parent URL
https://teachwell.auckland.ac.nz/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:46:54+00:00
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Multiple-choice questions

Source: https://teachwell.auckland.ac.nz/assessment/tests-exams/mcq/ Parent: https://teachwell.auckland.ac.nz/

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  1. Home  — 2. Assessment  — 3. Tests and exams  — Multi-choice questions

Multiple-choice questions

We provide some pointers to write MCQs to test students’ reasoning, rather than just recall.

We recommended that you find alternative ways to assess knowledge by designing questions that test students’ reasoning through short answer or essay questions. This also drives students to engage more deeply with their learning. Keep in mind that students will need more time to complete such assessment tasks where the difficulty level is higher.

In circumstances where multi-choice questions for assessment is appropriate, ensure the MCQs are written to test students’ reasoning, rather than just recall, as explained below. We also recommend you use question banks in Canvas Quiz, item banks in New Quizzes, or question sets in Inspera to mitigate the possibility of academic dishonesty in a non-invigilated setting.

Read the guide to randomising questions and answers for Inspera.

A tried-and-tested approach1

1

Identify a topic

Start with one that aligns with an intended learning outcome (ILO). For example:

2

For example:

3

From these statements, create true options

For the first statement above, a true option could be:

4

From these statements, create false options

For the first statement above, a false option could be:

5

Write a stem based on the topic

From the learning outcome, the topic we are trying to test here relates to improving crop yields and the cultivation methods that may help.

A possible stem might be:

6

Assemble the different combinations

If you wrote, for example, three statements in step 2 and then followed this up with one true and one false option for each of the three statements, you should now have six options to use.

For a multiple-choice question with four options, you can create a number of varieties just by swapping options in and out.

Don’t forget

See also…

Page updated 11/12/2025 (stylistic changes)

  1. * Adapted from The University of Sydney, How2MCQ – Tips for efficiently writing meaningful automarkable questions by Danny Liu.