Most IQ tests are multiple choice because that removes the variable of a human grader making subjective choices. IQ should not be about the quality of your test proctor.
Great. A multiple choice question with no choices.
Great. A multiple choice question without the choices.
Asking a multiple choice question without including the choices isn't really fair, but if one of the choices was 300, choose that one.
Asking a multiple choice question without providing the choices doesn't seem fair.
It is 1/5.
Not sure what a mulitple choice qustion is but if it is anything like a multiple choice question, it is 1/5 or 20%. I strongly advise you to get a dictionary, learn to spell or use a spell checker.
1/4
7 to 1
There is 1 right answer out of 5 possible answers, so the probability of guessing it correctly is 1/5 or 20% or 0.2.
Not sure what a mulitple choice qustion is but if it is anything like a multiple choice question, it is 1/5 or 20%. I strongly advise you to get a dictionary, learn to spell or use a spell checker.
7:1
Multiple-choice questions don't work without the list of choices.
6 to 1. (That is, 6 incorrect to 1 correct.) This is equaivalent to a probability of 1/7 or a 14% chance of guessing the correct answer.
You need to include the multiple choices in a multiple choice question.
An answer stem is the part of a multiple-choice question that presents the initial information or prompt to which the answer choices are related. It typically poses a question or incomplete statement that the test-taker must respond to by selecting the correct answer choice.
Multiple Choice tests offer at least one correct answer from among 4 or 5 choices. Some Multiple Choice increase this variable by adding answers like "A and C" or "A and B but not C" or even "All of" / "None of" the above.Choices maximize test-takers general knowledge of a subject. If you even did a minimum of reading, note-taking, and paying attention, most students should be able to figure out an answer.The key to solving Multiple Choice questions is to first exclude the wrong answers. Focus on the remaining choices and decide what makes the most logical sense or that you saw/heard in the class.On most multiple choice tests, you are not penalized for guessing. However, standardized tests may forbid guessing because wrong guesses lowers your score even more.