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研究:答题时感觉不能信

2012-03-26 16:14     作者 :    

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  在经历了无数次的考试后,你是不是也变得身经百练般了。对于考试,即使不会也总结了许多的诀窍来应付,所以,不会做题,总还是能蒙对几个。

  有人说:做选择题时对于那些拿不准的选项,要凭你感觉去选,这样的正确率大一些。但是研究显示,这种想法是错误的。一般来说,修改选择题答案比不修改答案的考试结果要好。

  The standard advice for multiple-choice tests is: if in doubt, stick with your first answer.

  College students believe it: about 75% agree that changing your first choice will lower your score overall (Kruger et al., 2005). Instructors believe it as well: in one study

  55% believed it would lower students' scores while only 16% believed it would improve them.

  And yet this is wrong.

  One survey of 33 different studies conducted over 70 years found that, on average, people who change their answers do better than those who don't (Benjamin et al.,

  1984). In none of these studies did people get a lower score because they changed their minds.

  Study after study shows that when you change your answer in a multiple-choice test, you are more likely to be changing it from wrong to right than right to wrong. So

  actually sticking with your first answer is, on average, the wrong strategy.

  Why do so many people (including many who should know better, like the authors of test-preparation guides) still say that you should stick with your first answer? Kruger

  et al. (2005) argue that it's partly because it feels more painful to get an answer wrong because you changed it than wrong because you didn't change it.

  So we tend to remember much more clearly the times when we changed from right to wrong. And so when taking a test we anticipate the regret we will feel and

  convince ourselves that our first instinct is probably right (when it's probably not).

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