| ▲ | bArray 16 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Typically you have -1/N for incorrect selection, where N is the number of choices. For N=4, you would grade incorrect answers as -0.25. If you have a person taking an exam that is not confident in themselves or generally knows the subject area, you don't want to negatively impact educated guessing. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | thaumasiotes 14 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> Typically you have -1/N for incorrect selection, where N is the number of choices. For N=4, you would grade incorrect answers as -0.25. That is definitely not typical. -0.25 is the appropriate adjustment for N=5. For N=4 you want -0.33. -1/N makes no sense at all. Note that doing this preserves the expected value of everyone's score, but artificially widens the variation, which you might not want. It does allow you to diagnose partial knowledge, which you probably do want. | |||||||||||||||||
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