Formulating Appropriate Questions
Good assessment lives or dies by the quality of its questions, and CTET tests whether you can frame questions that go beyond rote recall. Questions serve different purposes: some assess readiness (do learners have the prior knowledge needed before a new topic?), some diagnose misconceptions, and the best ones promote critical thinking and higher-order reasoning. The standard map for this is Bloom's revised taxonomy, a hierarchy of cognitive levels running from lower-order to higher-order thinking: Remember (recall facts), Understand (explain in own words), Apply (use knowledge in a new situation), Analyse (break apart and examine relationships), Evaluate (judge, justify, critique), and Create (combine ideas to produce something new). Remember and Understand are lower-order; Analyse, Evaluate and Create are higher-order. A question's verb signals its level: 'List the parts of a plant' is Remember; 'Design an experiment to test which soil grows beans fastest' is Create. CTET also distinguishes closed questions (one correct answer -- 'What is 7 x 8?', good for quick checks of facts) from open-ended questions (many possible responses -- 'Why do you think the character ran away?', which invite reasoning, divergent thinking and discussion). Over-reliance on recall and closed questions narrows learning to memorisation; a good teacher mixes levels and weights questions towards understanding and reasoning.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Assessment FOR / OF / AS learning
| Assessment FOR learning | Formative - ongoing, diagnostic, improves teaching & learning |
|---|---|
| Assessment OF learning | Summative - at the end, judges/grades achievement |
| Assessment AS learning | Self-assessment - child monitors own learning, becomes reflective |
| Test vs Measurement vs Evaluation | Test = a tool; Measurement = a number; Evaluation = a value judgement |
CCE in one line
| Continuous | Assessment is regular & built into teaching, not a single year-end exam |
|---|---|
| Comprehensive | Covers BOTH scholastic (academic) AND co-scholastic (life skills, attitudes) areas |
| Grading not marking | Reports grades/bands to cut unhealthy marks competition & stress |
| Purpose | Diagnose, remediate and develop the whole child - not just rank |