Metadata
Title
Short answer and essay questions
Category
general
UUID
a6be07df4a3244f6b1428205e8df5d05
Source URL
https://teachwell.auckland.ac.nz/assessment/tests-exams/essays/
Parent URL
https://teachwell.auckland.ac.nz/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:47:22+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Short answer and essay questions

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

Assessment

menu

  1. Home  — 2. Assessment  — 3. Tests and exams  — Short answer and essay questions

Short answer and essay questions

Short answer and essay questions are types of assessment that are commonly used to evaluate a student’s understanding and knowledge.

Tips for creating short answer and essay questions

Questions that promote deeper thinking

Use “open-ended” questions to provoke divergent thinking.

These questions will allow for a variety of possible answers and encourage students to think at a deeper level. Some generic question stems that trigger or stimulate different forms of critical thinking include:

Use questions that are deliberate in the types of higher order thinking to promote/assess

Rather than promoting recall of facts, use questions that allow students to demonstrate their comprehension, application and analysis of the concepts.

Generic question stems that can be used to trigger and assess higher order thinking

Comprehension

Convert information into a form that makes sense to the individual.

Application

Apply abstract or theoretical principles to concretepractical situations.

Analysis

Break down or dissect information.

Synthesis

Build up or connectseparate pieces of information to form a larger, more coherent pattern

Evaluation

Critically judge the validity or aesthetic value of ideas, data, or products.

Deduction

Draw conclusions about particular instances that are logically consistent.

Balanced thinking

Carefully consider arguments/evidence forand againsta particular position.

Causal reasoning

Identify cause-effect relationships between different ideas or actions.

Creative thinking

Generate imaginativeideas or novelapproaches to traditional practices.

Redesign test questions for open-book format

It is important to redesign the assessment tasks to authentically assess the intended learning outcomes in a way that is appropriate for this mode of assessment. Replacing questions that simply recall facts with questions that require higher level cognitive skills—for example analysis and explanation of why and how students reached an answer—provides opportunities for reflective questions based on students’ own experiences.

More quick, focused problem-solving and analysis—conducted with restricted access to limited allocated resources—will need to incorporate a student’s ability to demonstrate a more thoughtful research-based approach and/or the ability to negotiate an understanding of more complex problems, sometimes in an open-book format.

Layers can be added to the problem/process, and the inclusion of a reflective aspect can help achieve these goals, whether administered in an oral test or written examination format.

Example question Original format Alternative format, focusing on explanation
Example 1: Knowledge recall multiple choice or single correct answer
Example 2: Analytic style multiple choice question or short answer

Acknowledgement: Deakin University and original multiple choice questions: Jennifer Lindley, Monash University.

Setting word limits for discursive or essay-type responses

Try to set a fair and reasonable word count for long answer and essay questions. Some points to consider are:

Communicate your expectations around word count to students in your assessment instructions, including how you will deal with submissions that are outside the word count.

E.g., Write 600-800 words evaluating the key concepts of XYZ. Excess text over the word limit will not be marked.

Let students know how to check the word count in their submission:

See also

Multi-choice questions

Write MCQs that assess reasoning, rather than recall.

Multi-choice questions

Page updated 16/03/2023 (added open-book section)