The Effect of the Question Mark Option in Progress Testing: A Large-Scale Longitudinal Study

Publication date

2025-12-03

Authors

van Wijk, Elise V
Donkers, Jeroen
de Laat, Peter C J
Meiboom, Ariadne A
Jacobs, Bram
Ravesloot, Jan Hindrik
Tio, René A
Oud, Frederike M M
Kooman, Jeroen P
Bremers, André J A

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Formula scoring, widely used in medical progress tests (PT), includes a question mark option to discourage guessing, but this feature may disadvantage risk-averse students and bias results due to test-taking strategies. To enhance reliability and more accurately assess ability, Dutch medical schools recently transitioned to a computer adaptive-PT (CA-PT) based on Item Response Theory, which adjusts question difficulty dynamically, excluding the question mark option. This provided a unique opportunity to evaluate the impact of the question mark option in a large cohort. We specifically explored the relationship between question mark use in conventional PT and performance on CA-PT. METHODS: Retrospective data from medical students across seven faculties who took both PT formats were analyzed. Z-scores for total score and question mark score (number of unanswered questions) in the conventional PT, and theta score for the CA-PT were assessed. A linear model assessed the effect of the question mark score on theta, corrected for the conventional PT-score. Cluster analysis explored student subgroups per year. RESULTS: Students with similar conventional PT scores who left more questions unanswered on the conventional PT generally performed better on CA-PT. This effect diminished as students advanced through their studies. Cluster analysis revealed a variable effect between different students, most pronounced in year 4, and a reverse effect in year 5. DISCUSSION: Question mark option use significantly impacted student performance on PT, with a remarkable variability among students. This variability suggests that formula scoring captures more than knowledge alone, highlighting the need to align scoring methods with intended assessment goals.

Keywords

Educational Measurement/methods, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Netherlands, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Students, Medical/statistics & numerical data, Journal Article

Citation

van Wijk, E V, Donkers, J, de Laat, P C J, Meiboom, A A, Jacobs, B, Ravesloot, J H, Tio, R A, Oud, F M M, Kooman, J P, Bremers, A J A & Langers, A M J 2025, 'The Effect of the Question Mark Option in Progress Testing : A Large-Scale Longitudinal Study', Perspectives on medical education, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 891-904. https://doi.org/10.5334/pme.1673