NOTES ON WRITING DOWN YOUR EXAMINATION ANSWERS


In theory, how you choose to write down the answers to the examination questions should make no difference to your marks, provided that the material is there. In practice, we are human, we have to complete the marking together with marking for other papers against a deadline which is often uncomfortably tight, and we can make mistakes.

It is therefore in your best interests, as well as ours, for you to do what you can to present your answers clearly and straightforwardly, and to make them easy for us to find. Here are some hints which might help.

First, three principles. These hold no matter how you present your answers, but notice that, inevitably, the mark that we give depends on our being able to find and understand what you write.

Now the hints. They're not rules or laws; interpret them sensibly. If you ignore them, we'll cope. They are merely intended to make life easier for all concerned.

And, finally, a note written in some exasperation after marking last year's examination scripts :

It is sad, but clearly true every year, that a significant proportion of the students in the 340 class are unable to read the clearly printed instructions on the cover of the examination answer book, where it says ( among other things ) :

Begin the answer to a new question on a new page.

and

Write in the margin the number of each question attempted.
Do not use the margin for anything else.

Some of the instructions we don't care about, but those are important. I have wasted a lot of time scrabbling through answer books looking for practically invisible beginnings of questions, and it is not conducive to the benevolent frame of mind in which generous impulses might lead to the occasional additional mark. It wastes more time checking that the marks have been correctly transcribed to the cover, because the question totals can't be put at the top of the first page of the question.

If you are concerned about the ecological implications of wasting the occasional half side of paper, we sympathise, but as few answer books are completely used anyway the difference is tiny. Do not emulate one 1997 student who had the effrontery to write "Save the trees" before an answer which started in the middle of the page, while leaving blank the reverse sides of all the pages in the first answer book and using a second answer book to write a single page. Incidentally, the instructions also say :

Use both sides of each leaf.


Alan Creak,
October, 1998.


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