shravan_872
Member
its not unfair, u should have read the instructions!
It's obvious they knew the instructions if they did it for the other 19 and had a slip up on one...I think more the issue is that other people got awarded a mark when they didn't fill it in either makes it unfair. Either noone gets the mark or everyone, consistency makes it fair.its not unfair, u should have read the instructions!
It's obvious they knew the instructions if they did it for the other 19 and had a slip up on one...I think more the issue is that other people got awarded a mark when they didn't fill it in either makes it unfair. Either noone gets the mark or everyone, consistency makes it fair.
welcome to real life and uni lolI lost a mark in multiple choice because I circled the bubble instead of shading it in... Is this unfair?
You're obviously wrong, also others that are saying it's fair that he's lost a mark. Look at the situation from other posts. OP said that another student 'wrote' the answer and was awarded the mark, if it was in an HSC exam they would also lose the mark.Fair.
If it was the HSC exam you'd lose the mark as well.
You need to carefully read all instructions given. You also should be familiar with how to use an OMR multiple choice sheet by now.
You're obviously wrong, also others that are saying it's fair that he's lost a mark. Look at the situation from other posts. OP said that another student 'wrote' the answer and was awarded the mark, if it was in an HSC exam they would also lose the mark.
BUT in this case if a person who wrote the answer got a mark, circling the answer is on equal grounds, so OP should be awarded the mark.
I thought tests were to check if a student had the knowledge, not if the student made a slight mistake in placing the REQUESTED answer format (shading in the circle). If it's clear that the student indicated the correct answer and was marked incorrectly, then tests aren't doing what they're meant to be doing, which IMHO, is ludicrous.Wrong? Fairness seems to be a fairly subjective concept.
thisI thought tests were to check if a student had the knowledge, not if the student made a slight mistake in placing the REQUESTED answer format (shading in the circle). If it's clear that the student indicated the correct answer and was marked incorrectly, then tests aren't doing what they're meant to be doing, which IMHO, is ludicrous.