PhD, Cambridge English Teacher/Trainer

PhD, Cambridge English Teacher/Trainer
Cambridge International Examinations, EAP/ESP (aviation, business, legal & medical English Refresher Courses' Design, Teaching and Testing

Sunday, 22 April 2012

Developing Exam Skills: Answer what you are asked!


Friday, April 20, 2012

I’ve blogged about this before but it is worth mentioning again as we approach what I like to call, the ‘business end’ of the academic year - exam season.
One thing I often find is that students give an answer to a question they were never asked. For example, many students will spend valuable exam time discussing the downsides of a concept when they were asked only to analyse the benefits.
One way of preventing this, as well as allowing students to give a much more focused and well structured answer, is to use the key words from the question at the beginning of every paragraph.
For example,take the question:
Explain two benefits of targeting a niche market.
An ideal structure would be:
Definition of niche market…
One benefit of targeting a niche market is…
Another benefit of targeting a niche market is ...
As we can see, using the key words in a question ensures students actually ‘answer what they are asked’.
I really hope this helps and my original blog can be found here...........