All Quiet on the Western Front - The Exam
"Judge a man by his questions rather than by his answers.” Voltaire
Candide 12 - An Exam : This is the second exam for the World Literature Class, and served as the multiple choice part of the Semester 1 Final Exam. How can an exam be important? I believe a well-written exam is a work of art. Everyday in my classroom, there was a quiz. Quizzes are nonthinking, noncomprehension (of the bigger picture), and designed soley to see if the student did the reading. Exams are designed to see if the student has been putting together what they got out of the book with their reading together with the class, the activities, the group works, etc. See my page on Quizzes & Exams
Lesson Overview
There are many versions of this exam - this one focuses on the novel, the stories we read before, and Grand Illusion. It is more than possible to write an exam that requires thinking and does not try to "trick" the student - but rather to try and assess how much the student has been paying attention in class to what's been going on. It is also important to give thoughtful multiple choice exams because it is the kind of thing that the students may encounter again and again in their academic lives - starting with their ACT/SAT tests - and later in college. For my exams - I always try to give 5 possible answers - 4 of them plausable - though only one is correct - and one that is a kind of joke. First, to make it easier, second to put them at ease. While my quiz average for students that did the reading hovered at about 92% - my exam average was usually around 70%. I don't think that makes it a bad exam - I think it is another tool to try to get students to study and to process what happens in class.
Audio Visual Content
Remote Enhancements
I did give these exams during Remote Learning - it was trickier and will try and find more material on how I did it.
Links
A Short Unit on Peace and Empathy: After reading All Quiet (and the other 3 novels as well - The History of Love, Candide, and The Things They Carried) we pause - so to speak - for a midyear encounter with shorter works. The order given below is not necessarily the order we did these - that depended on the timing of Winter Break. Appropriately, The first lesson is on the Christmas Truce of 1914.
WHAT CAME BEFORE:
Thoughts on the Lesson
Since I first started teaching (some 35 years ago now) every time after I wrote an exam, I would think to myself, "Gosh - this is SO easy - the kids are going to ace it." And then they took it. The students would average between a 65% and a 70%. The first exam of the year always has the lowest scores. The students don't take it seriously; some students don't take the class serioiusly. I do know that the note taking always gets better after the first exam. I used to run the questions through the machine and get an analysis of the questions: how many students got a particular question wrong. What I found was a remarkably even distribution - it wasn't that certain questions were hard - students were just paying attention or studying different parts - or learning how to study - or not studying at all.