03-27-2007, 01:44 PM
KNOW how to approach multiple choice questions and PRACTICE. Some people seem to instinctively know how to answer multiple choice questions correctly, others of us not so much. There are skills that you can learn to help you answer these kinds of test questions. Here™s how Kaplan recommends approaching vignette styled multiple choice questions:
1. assemble key clues into a mental œsnapshot of the patient.
2. understand precisely what is being asked
3. allow a few moments to think, recall, and to anticipate possible answers
4. compare the given choices to your anticipated answer
5. mark choices that match best
6. rule out choices that don™t account for all findings
7. mark the best answer
Kaplan™s experts say that people who are bad at multiple choice questions focus on the choices rather than the stems of the questions. This is a very inefficient approach and one that tends to result in more mistakes. Those who are good at multiple choice questions focus on the stems, not the choices.
1. assemble key clues into a mental œsnapshot of the patient.
2. understand precisely what is being asked
3. allow a few moments to think, recall, and to anticipate possible answers
4. compare the given choices to your anticipated answer
5. mark choices that match best
6. rule out choices that don™t account for all findings
7. mark the best answer
Kaplan™s experts say that people who are bad at multiple choice questions focus on the choices rather than the stems of the questions. This is a very inefficient approach and one that tends to result in more mistakes. Those who are good at multiple choice questions focus on the stems, not the choices.