WEBVTT 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:03.270 Short Answer Questions (SAQs) 00:00:03.270 --> 00:00:14.710 Short answer questions (SAQs) tend to be open-ended questions (in contrast to MCQ) and are designed to elicit a direct response from students. 00:00:14.710 --> 00:00:25.200 SAQs can be used to check knowledge and understanding, support engagement with academic literature or a particular case study and to encourage a progressive form of learning. 00:00:25.200 --> 00:00:29.540 They can be used in both formative and summative assessment. 00:00:29.540 --> 00:00:43.100 SAQs may take a range of different forms such as short descriptive or qualitative single sentence answers, diagrams or graphs with explanations, filling in missing words in a sentence or a list of answers. 00:00:43.100 --> 00:00:50.440 Depending on the type of question, marking may simply involve checking against a list of correct answers. 00:00:50.440 --> 00:00:54.010 Alternatively a set of criteria may be used based on: 00:00:54.010 --> 00:00:58.610 - factual knowledge about a topic: have the questions been answered correctly? 00:00:58.610 --> 00:01:04.030 - numerical answers: will marks be given on the process as well as the product answer? 00:01:04.030 --> 00:01:10.720 - writing style: importance of language, structure, accuracy of grammar and spelling? 00:01:10.720 --> 00:01:13.430 How to design good questions: 00:01:13.430 --> 00:01:16.160 - express the questions in clear language 00:01:16.160 --> 00:01:19.360 - ensure there is only one correct answer per question 00:01:19.360 --> 00:01:21.780 - state how the question should be answered 00:01:21.780 --> 00:01:25.170 - direct questions are better than the sentence completion 00:01:25.170 --> 00:01:32.680 - for numerical questions, be clear about marks for process as well as product and whether units are part of the answer 00:01:32.680 --> 00:01:39.690 Be prepared to accept other answers; some of which you may not have predicted.