Open Book Examinations | Teen Ink

Open Book Examinations

June 9, 2014
By Ace_of_Aces BRONZE, Alappuzha, Other
Ace_of_Aces BRONZE, Alappuzha, Other
3 articles 0 photos 1 comment

Open book exams allow the examinees to carry books and other reference material related to the subject for the exam. It may sound easy, but the questions in these types of exams are actually harder than that of closed book exams. In my opinion I am against open book examinations.

First of all, it affects the memorizing ability and capacity of a student. Emphasis should be given on memorizing and thinking instead of searching for answers. A professional college student who writes exams by referring books rather than memorizing will in future, find his job very hard. Children spend too much time on finding answers instead of using knowledge, practicing skills and reasoning ability. This forces the student to skip questions and sacrifice valuable marks. By memorizing, one can easily cruise through the question paper and he knows if he can answer a question or not by simply reading that question.

Open book exams urge the students to buy expensive books for referring and it becomes difficult to ensure that all students are equally equipped regarding the books they bring. There also arises a problem of desk space. More desk space is needed for the children to place their reference book and equipment. By writing open book exams, a student’s brain is not exercised. They forget to add logic to their answers. They quickly scan through the textbook and they write the best answer the can find. Most students have a feeling that they need not study for open book exams since the books are available and they can easily write the answers. But they are terribly wrong. They’ll have to find the answers from that big text and if they can’t, they are very much doomed. Faults or mistakes like these can affect the marks of a student.

Finally, many students are still not familiar with open book exams. They still like the old fashioned closed book exams. So I conclude that closed book exams are way better than open book exams.



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This article has 2 comments.


on Jun. 27 2014 at 12:34 pm
Ace_of_Aces BRONZE, Alappuzha, Other
3 articles 0 photos 1 comment
Thanks sir for your complements. But maybe your friends whom you said intelligent (in doing their jobs) are just extremely talented and devoted in doing their jobs. I am not saying that your are wrong I am just telling a pssibility

on Jun. 19 2014 at 6:21 pm
iWriteForFood SILVER, Murfreesboro, Tennessee
9 articles 0 photos 21 comments

Favorite Quote:
&quot;Logic will get you from point A to point B. Imagination will take you everywhere.&quot; ~Albert Einstein<br /> <br /> &quot;Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.&quot; Ralph Waldo Emerson

Very well thought out article, and I definitely see your point! However, I don't think that the entire focus in school should be on memorization. Many kids memorize information for a closed book test, then simply forget it the minute they hand in their paper. One point I have to disagree with is that kids who don't memorize will have a hard time with their job. Often searching for information and knowing how to get a hold of it is just as, if not more important than, being able to memorize facts. I have friends that don't memorize well but are intelligent individuals, and I have no doubt they will go far in life. Overall though, your article was good and well formatted. Good job :)