Fill-in-the-blank questions are testing your understanding of context and facts. Usually, if you have been paying attention and keeping up with your homework, the question will be pretty simple to figure out. Example: "Twinkle, twinkle, little ___" should be familiar to anyone who has heard the song. However, in order to fill in the sentence "Snakes can unhinge their ___ to swallow food," you need to have studied snakes in your science class so that you remember that they unhinge their jaws. Here are some specific tips for different kinds of questions. * If there is a list of words that you can use, try putting each word into the blank and reading it (to yourself if you are in class, out loud if you are alone) to see if it makes sense in that spot. * If you have a comparison question ( "x is to y as z is to ___"), think about what you know about x and y, then see if you can think of anything that will have a similar relationship to z. For example: "Boat is to water as helicopter is to ___" would make you think about how boats and water go together. Boats are things you can use to travel in water, so you would think that helicopters are things you can use to travel in air, then you would choose "air" as your answer.
Multiple-choice questions Short answer questions Critical thinking questions (Extended response) True-false questions Document-based questions Matching questions (for events, places, vocab words and important terms) Compare and contrast questions
Science questions are science questions.
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Related Questions are Questions that are similar or Questions that kind of mean the same thing.
20 questions is 40% of 50 questions.
You would need to know the number of questions on the test, and then multiply that number by 0.08 to find the number of essay questions.
Essay questions may also be referred to as open-ended questions, long-answer questions, or free-response questions.
70% of 31 questions is 31*70/100 = 21.7 questions. However, since you cannot have 0.7 questions, the answer is one of: 21 questions = 68% or 22 questions = 71%
English - 75 Questions Mathematics - 60 Questions Reading - 40 Questions Science - 40 Questions (Optional) Writing - 1 Prompt
The community tries to prevent this as much as possible but there are always vandals and spammers on the site. These are user that answer questions with stupid things or answer questions with more questions.
Yes/No questions, question word questions and choice questions. I think there is more but these are the three basic types.Objective and Structured.Search and check, author & me, right there, on my own
Questions that relate to a specific topic.