Do your teachers allow for any use of open book/notes for tests?

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In summary, most of the math I have done has been in closed-book exams, but I prefer the open-book format. I think it's more challenging and less stressful.
  • #1
land_of_ice
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What level of math are you in,
also, is it at a 2 year college or a university?
How about other math classes (after trigonometry) ?
 
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  • #2
I have given open-notes quantum mechanics exams to graduate students: four hours, do any four of five questions. The students hated this format.
 
  • #3
I have had tests like this, there isn't much of a difference except that you have to study differently and the examinator need to put more effort into the questions.
 
  • #4
I'm currently in calc III at a 2 year college, I've had many no calculator tests and also take home open book, classmate, and the teacher gives hints. I would take the no calculator tests any day over open book. Open book tend to be really open and sometimes its hard to nail down exactly what the teacher wants, especially when trying to figure out a new concept. Many times this involves proving all the aspects around the proof. Solving straight direct problems is much easier.
 
  • #5
I've had close book and notes, open book no notes, no book open notes, etc. Also, you'll see take home exams every now and again. But this all depends on your professor. However, the VAST majority of my exams so far have been typical closed-everything exams in class for about an hour.
 
  • #6
I'm considering changing the format of my exams to open-note or even take-home (Intro Physics I, II). I'm curious to hear what the students think- do you have a preference, and why?
 
  • #7
Personally, I like the idea of a take-home exam which is more difficult than the average homework set and in which you're only required to solve n-1 out of n problems, or something like that. It's more challenging and much, much more rewarding and far less stressful than an in-class exam for which you're worried about memorizing all the "right" stuff.

From talking to my professors about this same thing, I get the impression it's actually more difficult to write a take home exam or an exam for which students are allowed to use notes. I suppose it's because the questions have to be different altogether; not just harder, but conceptually harder, because all the formulas and basic facts are at your fingertips. Again, I prefer this because it forces you to learn all the material rather than memorize the test-able material.
 
  • #8
Newtime said:
Personally, I like the idea of a take-home exam which is more difficult than the average homework set and in which you're only required to solve n-1 out of n problems, or something like that.

In theory, I like this idea. Unfortunately, I have seen enough examples (at a number of universities where I have taught)) of students cheating (they get somebody else to solve problems for them) on take-home exams that I will not give take-homes.
 
  • #9
I just finished my first year of math at university. I've only had math courses (calc, linear algebra, abstract algebra, analysis I+II, probability&statistics, differential geometry, discrete math) and all my written exams have been open-book 3.5-4.5 hours (this semester I will also have some take-home 36h exams, and I have had a few oral exams).

I prefer the open-book format as closed-book tests often result in people preparing by memorizing a number of facts, while open-book tests result in people preparing by trying to understand the material, common techniques and how the results are derived. Open-book also often results in more creatively challenging questions as the test-creators know not to test if you know your basic facts, but rather whether you understand them thoroughly and can apply them.

At most of my exams I haven't needed to open my book, but it's nice to know I have the possibility in case I forget whether a theorem requires a function to be n-times differentiable or n-times continuously differentiable, and whether we need differentiability at the end-points of a closed interval. In case of a closed-book exam I would have spend a significant time making sure I really could remember the technical details.
 
  • #10
George Jones said:
In theory, I like this idea. Unfortunately, I have seen enough examples (at a number of universities where I have taught)) of students cheating (they get somebody else to solve problems for them) on take-home exams that I will not give take-homes.

I could see this happening quite often. You would think that the only people who are in upper level math/physics courses are there because they want to be and are willing to work but I guess there will always be those looking for a shortcut.
 
  • #11
George Jones said:
In theory, I like this idea. Unfortunately, I have seen enough examples (at a number of universities where I have taught)) of students cheating (they get somebody else to solve problems for them) on take-home exams that I will not give take-homes.

Cheating is one of my concerns, as well.

Even so, I believe that establishing an effective learning environment requires an element of trust; for example, the students must trust me not to ridicule their 'stupid' questions in class. And to some degree, I should trust them to be honest. So far, it's worked.

But as Newtime mentioned, take-home exams are much more difficult to write, for the exact reason mentioned- I have to account for the immense amount of material they have access to. In-class open-book (or allowing a 'cheat-sheet') tests are easier to write.

Maybe I'll let the class vote, and unless there is a clear majority (take-home vs. in-class), I'll default to in-class open-note. The faculty I've talked to tell me that students rarely open the book- the book is more like a security blanket and relieves some test anxiety.
 
  • #12
Most of my classes have 1 to 2 hour exams where I'm allowed to bring in one 8.5 x 11 piece of paper with anything I want written on it, front and back. I like this format. They're also normally small enough to finish in half the time allotted if you're very quick with solving each problem. This size reduces stress, allows good students to check and recheck their work, and allows bad students to sit and think for a while.
 
  • #13
Andy Resnick said:
So far, it's worked.
What exactly do that mean?
 
  • #14
Klockan3 said:
What exactly do that mean?

I haven't had a problem with student cheating, even when they have an opportunity to do so.
 
  • #15
Andy Resnick said:
I'm considering changing the format of my exams to open-note or even take-home (Intro Physics I, II). I'm curious to hear what the students think- do you have a preference, and why?

(IMO)They will cheat. I think take-home exams are only suitable for grad students or upper year undergrads.
 
  • #16
nicksauce said:
(IMO)They will cheat. I think take-home exams are only suitable for grad students or upper year undergrads.

Perhaps. One way to reduce cheating among each other is to introduce a true curve grading scale. Therefore, if you help another student by doing his homework or his take home test, you hurt yourself. You can never prevent them, however, from posting on physics help forums or from having a family member or friend not in the class to help them.
 
  • #17
xcvxcvvc said:
Perhaps. One way to reduce cheating among each other is to introduce a true curve grading scale. Therefore, if you help another student by doing his homework or his take home test, you hurt yourself. You can never prevent them, however, from posting on physics help forums or from having a family member or friend not in the class to help them.
That could also lead to punishment of those who choose not to cheat, so I don't think a true curve grading scale is such a good idea.
 
  • #18
Andy Resnick said:
I haven't had a problem with student cheating, even when they have an opportunity to do so.
How do you know?
 
  • #19
Andy Resnick said:
The faculty I've talked to tell me that students rarely open the book- the book is more like a security blanket and relieves some test anxiety.

I can attest to this being absolutely true, at least within my circle of friends/classmates.

nicksauce said:
(IMO)They will cheat. I think take-home exams are only suitable for grad students or upper year undergrads.

I very much agree.
 
  • #20
Klockan3 said:
How do you know?

That's a fair question- I guess, strictly speaking, I don't know (since I am unable to watch 100% of the students 100% of the time). All I can say is I've yet to see any evidence that cheating has occurred.
 
  • #21
nicksauce said:
(IMO)They will cheat. I think take-home exams are only suitable for grad students or upper year undergrads.

Why? Do you think one student population have a greater desire to cheat over another?
 
  • #22
xcvxcvvc said:
Perhaps. One way to reduce cheating among each other is to introduce a true curve grading scale.

I'm opposed to 'grading on a curve'. I feel it adds an element of competition that distracts from focussing on learning the material.
 
  • #23
Andy Resnick said:
Why? Do you think one student population have a greater desire to cheat over another?

I don't know what nicksauce has to say, but since I agreed with him I'll give my two cents: yes I do. In my classes, many of those in lower level math and physics courses are there because they have to be and don't care at all about learning the material; they just want the grade.
 
  • #24
Andy Resnick said:
I'm opposed to 'grading on a curve'. I feel it adds an element of competition that distracts from focussing on learning the material.
Exactly, and not only that, if you think about it it's unfair and doesn't paint a real picture of students' knowledge even if you do see tests as being able to show this true knowledge. You could have a hundred extremely apt students who would all be the best minds in the country, some scoring 100%, some 99% etc., but those that'd score, say, "only" 95% would get a D just because there're people that did a bit better. You could also get the opposite result where all students were subpar, but you'd give out A's regardless, since some would be less subpar. Therefore I'm completely opposed to curve grading, as well, because it leads to grades contingent on relative and not absolute knowledge.
 
  • #25
Ryker said:
Exactly, and not only that, if you think about it it's unfair and doesn't paint a real picture of students' knowledge even if you do see tests as being able to show this true knowledge. You could have a hundred extremely apt students who would all be the best minds in the country, some scoring 100%, some 99% etc., but those that'd score, say, "only" 95% would get a D just because there're people that did a bit better. You could also get the opposite result where all students were subpar, but you'd give out A's regardless, since some would be less subpar. Therefore I'm completely opposed to curve grading, as well, because it leads to grades contingent on relative and not absolute knowledge.

Ok, but there is still a human on the other end of the algorithm (the professor) who should have enough sense in that scenario to reward all students with an A. Further, you're applying the theory to a single class, too small of a sample to count. Instead, any reasonable professor applying a curve does so with all past students he's ever had, and while on the journey to acquiring such a history as to make his algorithm less quirky, he has the sense of a human being to iron out to rough spots.
 
  • #26
nicksauce said:
(IMO)They will cheat. I think take-home exams are only suitable for grad students or upper year undergrads.

At one university where I taught, a couple of grad students were caught cheating on a take-home exam (not for my class).
George Jones said:
I have given open-notes quantum mechanics exams to graduate students: four hours, do any four of five questions.

I caught a grad student cheating on this type of exam. A student, whose first language was xxxx, came to the exam with a text that had an unmarked cover and asked "Can I use this xxx-to-English dictionary during the exam?" I replied, "Sure."
Andy Resnick said:
Even so, I believe that establishing an effective learning environment requires an element of trust; for example, the students must trust me not to ridicule their 'stupid' questions in class. And to some degree, I should trust them to be honest.

This was a small grad class, and I thought that I had established good relationships with all the students, so I trusted him, and I didn't check the book until after the exam started, when his use of it made me suspicious. The book was an advanced quantum mechanics text written in xxxx. I was deeply hurt that this student had abused the trust that I had placed in him, and had made an outright lie to me (face-to-face) in order to try and cheat.

Also, we (the Mentors) have caught students trying to use Physics Forums to cheat on upper level/grad take-homes.

So, occasionally, grad student cheat too.
 
  • #27
This discussion is interesting- on one hand, most students (at least the ones posting) like open-note tests because it's a better measure of their comprehension. On the other, some people claim this encourages cheating (presumably by *others* :) .

Edit: George posted while I was composing... George, your experiences must have been frustrating. But, how can we discourage cheating while not penalizing the honest students? I don't think you would prefer to turn the classroom into a maximum-security observation prison...

What if test questions could be designed to make cheating *more effort* that knowing the material in the first place?
 
  • #28
Andy Resnick said:
This discussion is interesting- on one hand, most students (at least the ones posting) like open-note tests because it's a better measure of their comprehension. On the other, some people claim this encourages cheating (presumably by *others* :) .

Edit: George posted while I was composing... George, your experiences must have been frustrating. But, how can we discourage cheating while not penalizing the honest students? I don't think you would prefer to turn the classroom into a maximum-security observation prison...

What if test questions could be designed to make cheating *more effort* that knowing the material in the first place?

How can you do that? How can you make it harder to cheat than to know the material if cheating means you have someone who knows the material doing your exam?
 
  • #29
It's a bit disheartening to hear that people (even grad students who presumably want to do research in the area) cheat on take home exams.

Take-home exams are pretty common at my university and I have never heard of anyone cheating. I suspect and hope only a very small minority of the students try cheating, and it will affect them negatively later on so I don't really feel cheated personally.

But, how can we discourage cheating while not penalizing the honest students? I don't think you would prefer to turn the classroom into a maximum-security observation prison...
I know this is not directed at me, but I want to share my thoughts anyway.

At my school it's common for a class to have either an in-class test or weekly assignments which are awarded a pass/fail mark. Any student with a hope of passing should be able to earn pass on these (in the case of weekly assignments often it's only required that 80% of assignments are awarded pass). If a student fails this they will not be eligible to participate in the final exam and will be given a fail grade for the course. If they pass they will get to participate in the exam and get a real grade, but the pass/fail stuff has no influence on the grade. This both forces students to keep up with coursework and not just cram at the end, and it makes it much harder to cheat without acquiring at least some mastery of the subject (you have to be a dedicated cheater to have someone else help you cheat on a weekly basis). This is by no means foolproof and I suspect the reasoning behind it is to keep students engaged in the subject rather than to avoid cheating.

Personally I would try to trust students even if some don't deserve it. If you want to give a take-home exam give it. If someone wants to cheat he will cheat, but he will only really cheat himself (assuming you don't judge on a curve). If the class is small enough that you know your students personally and someone turned in something you consider suspicious (for instance if someone who barely understands the basic concepts submits a perfect answer to a hard assignment), then you can invite that person to a talk about the exam. Not in an accusatory manner, but just talk about the problems his approaches and thoughts. It should be apparent whether he cheated. If he did you can take the appropriate actions. If not you can congratulate him on his good performance.

If you really feel that cheating is a problem, then I would just do a normal test (open- or closed book) that is supervised. It really isn't that much worse, but personally I feel that instructors should be able to trust their students (and vice versa) in a university-setting.
 
  • #30
Newtime said:
I don't know what nicksauce has to say, but since I agreed with him I'll give my two cents: yes I do. In my classes, many of those in lower level math and physics courses are there because they have to be and don't care at all about learning the material; they just want the grade.

Exactly this.
 
  • #31
Andy Resnick said:
That's a fair question- I guess, strictly speaking, I don't know (since I am unable to watch 100% of the students 100% of the time). All I can say is I've yet to see any evidence that cheating has occurred.
It is really hard to see that people cheat. I have corrected assignments as a TA and I have found one really glaring mistake which made it obvious that he cheated, he made an error in the beginning which gave the wrong relationship between two variables but later he used the correct relationship like everybody else. Basically he didn't understand anything and just copied someones elses solution for his values.

In my opinion when person A explains step by step how to solve the problem to person B then B is cheating, of course he needs to have a rudimentary understanding of the basics to be able to do this. This type of cheat is all but impossible to find though and is really common. Basically the freeloader in a study group. I have also seen how my classmates solved their assignments, a few actually did solve it and the rest either got the solution explained by those or they tried to solve it in all ways possible till their solution looks like everyone elses. And yes they all compare solutions to make sure they are right...

I don't really have much respect at all for home assignments for these reasons, but for upper level courses there isn't much else you can do that gives a fair examination and it gets exceedingly harder to cheat in this way the harder the courses gets so it is ok.
 
  • #32
nicksauce said:
(IMO)They will cheat. I think take-home exams are only suitable for grad students or upper year undergrads.

I agree, its amazing how many people will become friends with the smart kid when they have to do mastering physics homework just for one example; and they do cheat in tests too, I've had a few teachers who don't allow formula sheets or whatnot on tests and trust me students will find a way to bring their own and pass it to their classmates (I've heard of very elaborate cheating methods)
 
  • #33
xcvxcvvc said:
How can you do that? How can you make it harder to cheat than to know the material if cheating means you have someone who knows the material doing your exam?

I'm not claiming to have solved the problem.

But, my exams have open-ended questions: I've even used questions posted at PF (suitably modified) as questions. My reasoning is that (1) a student who gets an advanced student to answer the question for them will be obvious- just as you can tell on PF who has more advanced knowledge, and (2) by making the questions slightly ambiguous, forcing the student to lay out a line of thought, I can tell if the student's reasoning deviates from their questions and discussions in class.
 
  • #34
Cheating will always be there. The question is if the added bonus of having this kind of test for the motivated students weights up the amount of people who barely learned anything at all and still passed the course due to cheating.

I think that in the end the motivated students will fare well no matter the examination method, if you don't have a take home exam they will still do comparable problems of their own in order to train for the exam. If you have a normal guarded exam then at least most won't cheat which is why this method is the most used.
 
  • #35
rasmhop said:
At my school it's common for a class to have either an in-class test or weekly assignments which are awarded a pass/fail mark. Any student with a hope of passing should be able to earn pass on these (in the case of weekly assignments often it's only required that 80% of assignments are awarded pass). If a student fails this they will not be eligible to participate in the final exam and will be given a fail grade for the course. If they pass they will get to participate in the exam and get a real grade, but the pass/fail stuff has no influence on the grade. This both forces students to keep up with coursework and not just cram at the end, and it makes it much harder to cheat without acquiring at least some mastery of the subject (you have to be a dedicated cheater to have someone else help you cheat on a weekly basis). This is by no means foolproof and I suspect the reasoning behind it is to keep students engaged in the subject rather than to avoid cheating.

This is an interesting idea- I need to think about incorporating this. I do have 'reading quizzes' (based on the Just-In-Time instructional method), and this sounds similar. I don't have a punitive component...

But yes, having a large variety of ways to assess the student is a good idea in general.
 

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