Short-Answer question type
- Managing questions
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- Calculated
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- Description
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- Embedded Answers (Cloze)
- Multiple Choice
- Random Short Answer Matching
- Select missing words
- Short-Answer
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- Third-party question types
- Questions FAQ
In a short answer question, the student types in a word or phrase in response to a question (that may include a image). Answers may or may not be case sensitive. The answer could be a word or a phrase, but it must match one of your acceptable answers exactly. It's a good idea to keep the required answer as short as possible to avoid missing a correct answer that's phrased differently.
The Quiz and Lesson modules both have short answer question types. The analysis of the question given below works for both modules. However there is another analysis type available for Lesson which is not available in a Quiz (see note below).
Question set-up
- Select the question category
- Give your question a descriptive name.
- Create the question text. If you're using the HTML Editor, you can format the question just like a word processing document.
- Tip: Normally the answer box appears below the question text. However, if you include five or more underscores in the text, the input box will be placed there. For example the question "Moodle stands for 'Modular object oriented ___________________ environment".
- Select an image to display if you want to add a picture to the question (see step 4 in Multiple Choice question type for more detail).
- Set the 'default question grade' (i.e. the maximum number of marks for this question).
- Set the 'Penalty factor' (see Penalty factor below).
- If you wish, add general feedback. This is text that appears to the student after he/she has answered the question.
- Choose whether the answers are case-sensitive. Case sensitivity can be tricky where capitalization is important. Will you accept Ban Ki-moon as well as ban ki-moon as an answer?
- Next, fill in the answers you will accept. You could give common misspellings partial credit with this option. For example will you accept "Ban Ki moon"? Use wildcards to allow for variants on a word pr phrase.
- Add grade for each answer.
- Create feedback for any and all answers. This will appear if the student enters that answer.
- Note: It is good practice to add a single wild card * for the last answer, so you can create a feedback response and a score for all other answers students might have.
- Click Save Changes to add the question to the category.
Penalty factor
The 'penalty factor' only applies when the question is used in a quiz using adaptive mode - i.e. where the student is allowed multiple attempts at a question even within the same attempt at the quiz. If the penalty factor is more than 0, then the student will lose that proportion of the maximum grade upon each successive attempt. For example, if the default question grade is 10, and the penalty factor is 0.2, then each successive attempt after the first one will incur a penalty of 0.2 x 10 = 2 points.
Wildcard usage
You can use the asterisk character (*) as a wildcard to match any series of characters. For example, use ran*ing
to match any word or phrase starting with ran and ending with ing. If you really do want to match an asterisk then use a backslash like this: \*
If you want one question with the two answers fuel and oxygen, you ought to be able to limit the number of variants by writing fuel*oxygen
. This would accept "fuel oxygen", "fuel, oxygen", "fuel; oxygen", "fuel and oxygen", "fuel & oxygen" "fuel oxygen", "fuel und oxygen" "fuel&&oxygen". It would even accept "fuel or oxygen", "fuel but not oxygen" "fuel|oxygen" which might not be so good but you can never be completely safe!
Here are some answers and scores for a question "What does a rocket burn?".
oxygen*fuel
with a score 100%*fuel*
with a score 50%*oxygen*
with a score 50%*air*
with a score 40%*
with a score of 0%
The order of the answers is important. The answers are evaluated from 1st to last. When a match is found the process stops. If no match is found the question is scored wrong and the general response is used. It is a good practice to put a wild card as the last answer so the evaluation process knows what to do when nothing above it matches.
Without wildcards, the answers are compared exactly, so be careful with your spelling!
Feedback for wrong answers
When you wish to have short answer type questions, you naturally have a limited number of variations that would be acceptable. So in case you wish to give a feedback in case of a wrong answer, you must spell out the right answers exactly and then use * as a final answer which will have grade as zero, and feedback will be the one for wrong answer.
Effectively, ANYTHING other than the specific answers mentioned by you will be treated as this option due to wildcard and will be deemed wrong; it'll give 0 marks and show the feedback for a wrong answer.
Here is an example:
What is a rabbit?
answer1: animal
feedback: right
grade: 100%
answer2: mammal
feedback: right
grade: 100%
answer3: vertebrate
feedback: right
grade: 100%
answer4: *
feedback: ouch! that was wrong
grade: none
Remember: you cannot do negative marking in this type and ANYTHING other than your right answer will be treated as option 4 due to the wildcard and given that feedback and zero marks.
Tip: Prototype your questions
You may like to prototype your short answer questions to catch common acceptable answers you hadn't thought of. Start out by creating a few acceptable answers, then include the question in a quiz for no points. Be sure to tell students you are testing a new question. Once the quiz is over, review students' answers and add their acceptable answers to the list.
Lesson module note
In the Lesson module, there are two different student answer analysis systems available for the Short Answer type of question: the simple system is used by default. The second type only available in Lesson Module is called "Regular Expressions". See Short answer analysis for a description of the new type, with examples.
Caveat about the apostrophe character
Computers consider the apostrophe character ( ' ) different from the single opening or closing quotation mark characters ( ‘ ) and ( ’ ). This is particularly important for computer programming questions, but can cause unexpected complaints from students taking quizzes of modern languages. See this forum post.
See also
- Pattern-match question type. A very ingenious question type from the Open University to automatically mark free text questions without error.
- Regular Expression Short-Answer question type - additional question type (for the Moodle quiz module) aims at a more advanced system of student's response analysis, through the use of regular expresssions. This question type is an extension of the SHORTANSWER type. It can be used on its own and can also be incorporated into the existing Cloze (embedded) question type.
- Perl compatible regular expression - additional question type. A question that could check student's response against several regular expressions and could give next character and next word hints. If you do not know what regular expression is, it could also work like Moodle Shortanswer question with hints, just choose "Moodle shortanswer" as notation and you could enter answers just like in shortanswer question type.