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How to study multiple choice questions
1. How to study multiple choice questions
For multiple choice questions, you should always pick the best answer. Sometimes, there may appear to be two answers that are correct, but it is almost always the case that one answer is significantly better than the other answer.
2. Questions may change
Here are a few of the ways in which questions in the notes may appear different on the exam.
On the exam, the order of the answers may be different.
On the exam, names, numbers, etc., in the questions may change.
Although the "correct" answer will appear in the available choices on the exam, there may be other "not correct" choices that appear on the exam but that do not appear in the same question in the notes.
3. Improving your odds
Even if you guess on a multiple choice question, you can improve your overall score if you can eliminate answers that you know are incorrect and then guess from the remaining questions.
See
Multiple choice exam .
4. Grouped questions
On a web page, questions with the same number but different letters are related, but only one of the questions would appear on an exam.
For example, questions 10A, 10B, 10C, and 10D would be related questions, not four different questions. Only one of these four related questions would be on an exam.
5. True-false questions
A true-false question is a multiple choice question where you have two possible answers.
a. True
b. False
6. End of page
7. Multiple choice questions for this page
6 questions omitted (login required)