I have always struggled with multiple choice questionnaires. Is this an Autistic Trait?
I have always struggled with multiple choice questionnaires. Is this an Autistic Trait?
The essays would be great if they didn't constrain the word count
Exactly! I always exceed the word limit.
I prefer multiple choice questions where there is a clear, correct and factual answer among the options.
The ones where I have to decide between variable options, none of which are clearly and logically correct, are more of a problem. The AQ autism questionnaire for example!
I hated essays at school. There are just too many variables. What do I put in and what do I leave out? What order do things go? Then having to think about phrasing, wording, paragraphs and grammar etc. Too much when the topic could be tested by multiple choice.
I have a real dislike of multiple-choice questions for the same reasons that others have stated. If none of the answers apply, it's always a relief when there is an option to tick a box that states something along the lines of 'Undecided' or 'It varies'.
Actually another thought.
CSE maths. I chickened out of the 'O level, maths teacher thought I'd have a nervous break down and let me take CSE for my mental welfare...another story.
Anyway, first question on the multichoice paper I will remember to my dying day.
"How many people would you expect at a birthday party?
A) 6
B) 60
C) 600
D) 6,000"
I dunno. How many friends have you got? Any of the above are possible. I thought about annotating the margin to state this was a social and philosophical question, not a mathematical one, but thought better of it and ticked 6, since most people don't have 600 or more genuine friends.
Mercifully, the paper moved on to some proper maths questions and I got a Grade 1 = O Level C+, so never had to worry about maths again.
Is there a point here? Dunno, maybe multi choice isn't a good format for autistic people unless you are prepared to accept a literally "out of the box" answer that was never listed.
Well, I hate the ones on MH assessments for anxiety etc...
If there is no suggest multi choice answer which exactly fits, I can't just tick the closest to, I have to annotate in the margins to get the most precise meaning conveyed...which annoys neurotypical assessors. But what can I say, I can't tick what is a bit true or mostly true. It needs to be exactly true.
It's lead to confusion before now, where a string of adjectives sort of indicated where I was but couldn't tick it because one of them was "socially isolated". God! I more likely feel "socially bombarded" . Yet this was the position of the scale the counsellor was looking for and apparently I'm being difficult by crossing out adjectives and writing notes in the margins. Don't they want my absolute truth? Sigh!
It depends on whether there is an answer I know is definitely correct. Sometimes I can look at the answers and think none of them, or can't decide between two options. I remember people talking years ago about a question on the 11 plus. Does the sun shine at night? I don't know what all the options would have been, we don't see it but it is still there. The problem I can have with multiple choice is you can't say it depends on.....
Hate thousand word essays.
I love writing thousand word essays, it’s like a huge info dump!
I like writing essays because I analyse everything and can include all the details!
I like multiple choice, as it helps when my brain goes blank which happens a lot when I don’t know what’s coming. It also means I’m on the right track with my answer, instead of reading the question completely wrong (which also happens a lot).
I like multiple choice questions because they are very specific and therefore appeals to my autistic brain.
Me too. Anything that's just question, answer I can do but things that are open ended I either freeze and don't know where to start or my mind wanders off. Needless to say, my exam results in essay subjects weren't good. If the autism questionnaires were "describe your childhood experience in 800 words" I would have burst into flame.
I thought at the time (and still haven't ruled out) I had undiagnosed ADHD and that was the reason I can't stay focused unless I'm constantly being pulled back on track.