Difference between revisions of "Multiple choice"
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*[[Questions Unlimited]] | *[[Questions Unlimited]] | ||
*[[Commissioner's Academic Challenge]] (and formerly NTAE/Panasonic Academic Challenge) | *[[Commissioner's Academic Challenge]] (and formerly NTAE/Panasonic Academic Challenge) | ||
− | *[[Science Bowl]] | + | *[[Science Bowl|National Science Bowl]] |
+ | *[[National Ocean Sciences Bowl]] | ||
==Formats that no longer use multiple choice questions regularly== | ==Formats that no longer use multiple choice questions regularly== |
Revision as of 16:00, 17 November 2020
Multiple choice questions provide players with a list of possible answers, one of which is correct.
It should be noted that good questions may limit the answer space to a finite number of answers. For example, a question with the phrase "this U.S. President" narrows down the number of possible correct answers to 44. Nevertheless, because the player is not given a list of possible answers to choose from, such scope-narrowing phrases do not make a question multiple choice.
Because they allow for a team with zero knowledge to earn points simply by guessing, multiple choice questions are generally considered a part of bad quizbowl.
Formats that use multiple choice questions
Televised
- CBI
- Bay Area Quiz Kids during the spring 2013 season (Season 14), for all tossups in the "Three-for-all" rounds
- WRAL Brain Game
- It's Academic (often during the team rounds, and generally the science questions in both the fourth round and the grab bag are multiple choice)
- High School Quiz Show (WGBH Boston)
- Challenge (New York metropolitan area)
Other
- Questions Unlimited
- Commissioner's Academic Challenge (and formerly NTAE/Panasonic Academic Challenge)
- National Science Bowl
- National Ocean Sciences Bowl