Aiken format: Difference between revisions
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The Aiken format is a very simple way of creating multiple choice questions using a clear human-readable format. (The GIFT format has many more options and perhaps is less prone to errors, but doesn't look as straight-forward as AIKEN. ) The question must be all on one line. Each answer must start with a single | The Aiken format is a very simple way of creating multiple choice questions using a clear human-readable format. (The GIFT format has many more options and perhaps is less prone to errors, but doesn't look as straight-forward as AIKEN. ) The question must be all on one line. Each answer must start with a single uppercase letter, followed by a period '.' or a bracket ')', then a space. The answer line must immediately follow, starting with "ANSWER: " (NOTE the space after the colon) and then giving the appropriate letter. | ||
NOTE: The answer letters (A,B,C etc.) and the word "ANSWER" '''must''' be capitalised as shown otherwise the import will fail. | NOTE: The answer letters (A,B,C etc.) and the word "ANSWER" '''must''' be capitalised as shown, otherwise the import will fail. | ||
Here is an example of the format: | |||
<pre>What is the correct answer to this question? | <pre>What is the correct answer to this question? |
Revision as of 10:53, 26 July 2011
The Aiken format is a very simple way of creating multiple choice questions using a clear human-readable format. (The GIFT format has many more options and perhaps is less prone to errors, but doesn't look as straight-forward as AIKEN. ) The question must be all on one line. Each answer must start with a single uppercase letter, followed by a period '.' or a bracket ')', then a space. The answer line must immediately follow, starting with "ANSWER: " (NOTE the space after the colon) and then giving the appropriate letter.
NOTE: The answer letters (A,B,C etc.) and the word "ANSWER" must be capitalised as shown, otherwise the import will fail.
Here is an example of the format:
What is the correct answer to this question? A. Is it this one? B. Maybe this answer? C. Possibly this one? D. Must be this one! ANSWER: D Which LMS has the most quiz import formats? A) Moodle B) ATutor C) Claroline D) Blackboard E) WebCT F) Ilias ANSWER: A
Both these examples imported into Moodle (1.9) gave questions looking like:
Which LMS has the most quiz import formats? Choose one answer. a. Blackboard b. WebCT c. ATutor d. Moodle e. Claroline f. Ilias
Importing
When importing there are many options, but these do not influence Aiken Format import:
Get category from file [_] Get context from file [_] Match grades [Error if grade not listed/Nearest grade if not listed] Stop on error [Yes/No]
Hints and Tips
- Use a text editor, like PSPad, (Windows "notepad" may not save with right encoding) to write the file with questions and save as a TXT file in UTF-8 format. Use only simple ' not slant ones ´ ` ! Avoid other exotic characters like … HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS (http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/2026/index.htm, three dots as a single character).
- Moodle XML Converter - more extensive version of AIKEN format. Supports almost all Moodle questions types - multichoice, shortanswer, cloze, essay, order, matching, numeric, truefalse