The Concept of Multiple-Choice Questions as an Intermodal Activity
in Teaching Occupation-Related Foreign Languages
Ludmila V. Makar
1
a
, Elena V. Fedotkina
1
b
and Murat V. Agaev
2
c
1
Russian University of Transport, Obrazcova Street, Moscow, Russian Federation
2
Kadyrov Chechen State University, A.Sheripova Street, Grozny, Russian Federation
Keywords: Foreign Language Teaching, Multiple Choice Questions, MCQs, Mediating Language Uses, Reception,
Production, Interaction, Special Features, MCQs Construction, MCQs-Based Activities.
Abstract: To turn language learners into effective communicators in an occupational domain the four language modes
(reception, production, interaction, and mediation) should be brought together. This paper considers the
concept of multiple-choice questions as a mediator between receptive and productive or interactive activities,
thus minimizing the number of steps and therefore transit time between different language uses, which is
especially essential in short course conditions. Regarding the dualistic purpose of MCQs their specific features
are revealed, which are also important for their construction procedure. An experimental set of items for an
occupation-related text and a draft chain of activities leading learners from reception (reading comprehension)
to production (short spoken output) are designed. Further steps to explore multiple-choice questions teaching
potential as an intermodal activity are outlined.
1 INTRODUCTION
Reception, production, interaction and mediation
distinguished by Common European Framework of
Reference for Languages (CEFRL, 2018) as the four
modes of communication in real life situations are
closely interconnected. This is why in teaching
foreign languages they should be brought together to
help learners become effective communicators.
In Russian context of teaching foreign languages
for occupational purposes, the integration usually
represents a long sequence of stages and steps
designed to prepare and push learners from one
language use to another through doing numerous
lexical and grammatical exercises and speech-related
tasks, among which are translation, making up a plan,
discussing questions, retelling, summarizing, etc.
Nevertheless, at non-language faculties where the
number of foreign language sessions is hardly enough
it is important to minimize the number of steps
between language uses without losing the quality of
training. It is achievable if use a teaching technique
whereby all learning activities would stem from one
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9465-5988
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6192-5758
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8183-5143
‘high-capacity’ task which allows to gradually
concentrate and shift learner’s attention to different
aspects of language so that they could accumulate
ideas, words and structures necessary to convert one
language use into the other. One of such techniques,
as we see it, is the work with denotations and
denotation maps. It makes a core part of the
technologies suggested for teaching monologic
speaking (Maletina, 2015) and spontaneous
monologic utterance in dialogic communication
(Serova & Tulieva, 2020), both grounded mainly on
careful reading and re-productive writing.
We have assumed that such ‘high-capacity’
mediating role can also be accredited to the format of
multiple-choice questions (MCQs). Our research
carried out to reveal the MCQs modern scope of use
shows that it is confined to two applications. Firstly,
MCQs are conventionally exploited as an assessment
instrument for monitoring the process of forming the
ability and readiness to communicate in job-related
situations with a large body of investigations digging
up the field. MCQ is the most versatile type of testing
format, “adaptable to various levels of learning
Makar, L., Fedotkina, E. and Agaev, M.
The Concept of Multiple-Choice Questions as an Intermodal Activity in Teaching Occupation-Related Foreign Languages.
DOI: 10.5220/0011607800003577
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Actual Issues of Linguistics, Linguodidactics and Intercultural Communication (TLLIC 2022), pages 99-104
ISBN: 978-989-758-655-2
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
99
outcomes, from simple recall of knowledge to more
complex levels, such as the student’s ability to
analyse phenomena, apply principles to new
situations, comprehend concepts and principles, …”
(Burton et al., 1991, p. 4). It is also easily adaptable
to all types of subject-matter including language
teaching. Secondly, MCQs when they are generated
by students are regarded as an efficient method for
learning in different occupational areas. When
generating questions students are to identify the
essential information in a passage they have read and
to write questions about the points they consider
important. Such activity helps them enhance
understanding of topics under study (Palmer &
Devitt, 2006) and “mature from passive into more
active learners” (Hutchinson & Wells, 2013, p. 117).
However, a MCQ construction procedure requires
some skill and experience students are unlikely to
possess even in their native language, which makes it
difficult for them “to construct knowledge
representations which are appropriate, accurate, and
well-elaborated” (Song, 2016, p. 64). This may be the
reason why this use has not found its application in
foreign language teaching, at least no evidence of
such use has been found. Along with the generation,
the aspects of MCQs peer assessment processes are
of academic interest (Kay et al., 2019).
The objective of this research is to initiate the
exploration of the MCQs format in its new
application – as a teaching technique which, on the
one hand, assures the understanding of a foreign
language income and, on the other hand, supplies
means necessary for producing an outcome, thus
mediating reception and production or interaction.
This paper considers theoretical and practical issues
of MCQs as an intermodal activity, namely 1)
determining their specific features and basic
principles for construction, 2) designing an
experimental set of MCQs for an occupation-related
text, 3) designing a possible chain of MCQs-based
activities leading to the output desired and piloting it
in classroom conditions, 4) outlining further
directions of study.
2 SPECIAL FEATURES OF MCQS
AS AN INTERMODAL
ACTIVITY
Even when targeted only at reading comprehension
“different MC questions … create very particular
comprehension and response processes” (Rupp et al.,
2006, p. 470). The dualistic function of MCQs under
study cannot but influence their features such as
content, linguistics and layout which must be taken
into considerations in the design process.
First of all, careful reading and choosing answers
for MCQs makes learners concentrate on target ideas
of the text. With non-language students in focus, it
should be admitted that their background knowledge
is usually enough to “be able to understand many of
the individual idea units or propositions in a text”, but
their language level is often much behind making
them spend much time “to form an overall
representation of the text in their mind” (Green, 2014,
p. 100). This is why MCQs should be designed so that
to be helpful for students not just to extract individual
meanings but form a coherent system of information
where individual ideas follow each other logically. It
may coincide with the logical structure of the text or
may not as long as it adequately conveys its concept.
As the outcome product is also expected to have
logic, which in fact means a kind of planning, MCQs
have to be combined in a set in a way that ensures the
logical flow of input information with the prospective
output product in mind to facilitate the production
process.
The second consideration concerns the MCQs
vocabulary. The fabric of an occupation-related text
is made of the so-called general scientific vocabulary
(abstract nouns and verbs) which is of especial
difficulty to learners (Polubichenko, 2019) and
requires ample practice to be mastered properly.
According to the studies that examined vocabulary
acquisition on the basis of reading, text-based lexical
enhancement work can increase the efficiency of
vocabulary skills (Laufer, 2003; Min, 2008).
Although MCQs do not pursue a distinct vocabulary
goal, the comprehension task cannot be done without
vocabulary knowledge. Hence, the retention of the
target vocabulary and its turning from receptive into
productive can be regarded as a supplementary goal
when designing MCQs to be an intermodal activity.
Words included into MCQs become more salient
attracting learners’ attention and building into their
personal vocabularies. In fact, doing MCQs as a
comprehension enhancement activity implies the
consolidation of the target words and incidental
vocabulary acquisition.
And finally, an MCQ structure may play part
tuning the learners in for the oncoming output. A
basic multiple-choice item consists of a stem and a
list of several alternatives containing a single or
multiple answers and distractors. If a desired output
is interaction, it seems reasonable for the stem to take
the form of a question. A question and the answer(s)
form a dialogue unity. This feature may be used for
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rehearsal activities when two or more learners are
involved into the check-up process – asking questions
and giving the answer(s) with the possibility to signal
if they agree or do not and justify their position. It can
also be treated as an opportunity for practicing simple
cooperative / communication skills such as
disagreeing politely, asking for help, and thanking
partners. If a production output is desired, it is rather
that a MCQ stem takes the form of an incomplete
sentence. Together with correct answer(s) it will
make a complete sentence to become a part of the
final product.
On a balance, the construction of MCQs
designated to mediate reception and production /
interaction should evidently start with a well-defined
final output product, its content, vocabulary and
structural characteristics. The key principles to be
followed include: 1) covering basic ideas of the text,
which does not mean all ideas, but only those which
are to be included into the final output, 2)
constructing as many items as there planned to be
sentences in the expected output, 3) arranging items
in an order that makes up a plan of the output, 4)
choosing the grammatical structure of a MCQ stem
depending on the type of the final output in view –
production or interaction, 5) covering the target
vocabulary but in a way that does not contradict the
general guidelines of writing MCQs designed solely
for comprehension assessment purposes to exclude
the possibility of choosing the correct option(s) out of
recognizing the key words rather than understanding
ideas.
3 CONSTRUCTING MCQS AS AN
INTERMODAL ACTIVITY
This section exemplifies the application of the
foregoing principles when constructing MCQs as an
intermodal activity between a written input material
and a short spoken production output as a final
product.
3.1 The Characteristic of the Input
Material
The input material is a text for reading within the
topic Passenger Service, part of a greater module
Passenger Transportation taught to 3
rd
year part-time
railway students (Makar, 2021). It contains factual
(terminology, specific details and elements) and
conceptual (classifications and categories, principles
and generalizations, and theories, models, and
structures) knowledge, which is typical for
occupation-related texts in general (Andersen &
Krathwohl, 2001).
The text consists of four paragraphs, which is
considered to be a justified length corresponding to
different language levels. However, short texts like
this are claimed to be difficult due to the limited
amount of information they contain (Arshad et al.,
2020). Readability formulas also interpret the text as
difficult to read. Thus, the Flesch reading-ease test
taking into account the number of sentences, words
and syllables scores it 35, and the New Dale-Chall
Formula, which uses its own graded word list to
determine potentially difficult words, scores it 8.5.
Quantitative characteristics (712 syllables, 403
words, 16 sentences) testify that the difficulty arises
from the long complex sentences (average sentence
length is 25 words). Although most of the words are
single (55 %) and double (28 %) syllabled,
qualitatively the text vocabulary presents difficulty
comprising many general scientific words
problematic for students to memorise, retain and use
due to their functional and semantics features. No title
or illustrations that could aid in comprehension
accompany the text.
3.2 The Considerations on MCQs
Construction
The type of the target output is a short spoken report
about a passenger service or product. To determine
the content and number of MCQs and their order in
the set it was necessary to determine quantitative and
qualitative characteristics of the final product: the
main ideas to cover, the number of sentences and their
logical sequence. Based on the content of the text, it
was decided that six sentences and, hence, six
multiple choice items are enough to convey its
meaning. To determine their order an illustrative
outcome was produced whose logic did not
completely coincide with the order of information
chunks in the text. The information demanded in
items five and six in the text follows in reverse order.
The planned output being a short report,
grammatically each MCQ represents a combination
of a stem in the form of an incomplete sentence and a
list of four alternatives mostly in the form of short
word combinations so that a stem connected with a
correct option or options produces a complete
sentence. Out of six MCQs two are single correct
option, four – multiple (two or three) to cover the text
content and diversify the difficulty of items.
Lexically, it was decided to avoid verbatim
phrasing and simplify the vocabulary, which are the
The Concept of Multiple-Choice Questions as an Intermodal Activity in Teaching Occupation-Related Foreign Languages
101
basic vocabulary requirements to MCQs
construction. For the purpose we employed
appropriate lexical strategies, mainly paraphrasing,
with the use of previously learnt and more frequent
vocabulary. Of eight general scientific words and
eight topical word combinations the unit focuses on,
five target words and word combinations were
included in paraphrased MCQ chunks in the form
they were introduced (compete, destination, improve
(2), marketing campaign, customer survey) both in
correct and incorrect options not to be regarded by
students as signals for answers, the word quality was
presented as a definition, schedule, competitors,
promotion, departure point are the forms.
3.3 MCQs-Based Activities
In this section the sequence of activities deploying
around MCQs constructed and observations made in
classroom conditions are presented. The learners
were instructed that the MCQs were the basis for a
scope of follow-up activities so that they could keep
proper attention to the items.
Activity 1: careful reading of the text and deciding
on the correct answers to choose from the alternatives
provided. The task was done individually to allow
learners activate their personal background
knowledge on the topic and language skills to
interpret the textual information. As with any learning
activity, there was allotted definite time to finish the
activity. However, as the MCQs were designated for
learning (not for assessment), there was no strict time
limit and it was reasonably prolonged for the learners
to prepare well enough. It should be noted that the
time was partly spent on the revision of MCQs
vocabulary, since the learners understood that they
would need it in further activities. Thus, the task
evidently encouraged them to make more efforts to
retain those words as the important ones.
Activity 2: justifying individual choices as a class
to check comprehension. As learners were primarily
focused on comprehension, this activity provided
opportunities for making corrections and fixing the
correct answers. Additionally, it did not allow the
weaker learners to skip over thought-conveying target
words, made learners hear and pronounce them
several times, thus consolidating their correct
spelling, pronunciation and meanings, which
hopefully may facilitate the retention of the context
and contextually meaningful words. There is an
option of going through the MCQs discussion twice
if the time allows and there is a learning necessity:
first in small groups, then as a class.
Activity 3: generating an intermediate shortened
summary-type text out of the stems and correct
responses by eliminating the distractors. The new text
presented a coherent representation of the original
text concept in full sentences, which is typical for
reports, but lexically and grammatically it was
simpler as is attribute to spoken patterns, and its
structural organization differed. In fact, this was a
reproductive activity aimed at taking in the ideas from
the text read and tying them with the thought-
conveying words. The summary was peer-assessed,
which did not take much time but contributed to the
consolidation of the vocabulary in a more demanding
situation. The intermediate text product could be
treated as a model to be used at the last – production
– stage. As it was a classroom work, the text was
hand-written. However, if done with the use of
electronic devices one can just delete the distractors
to have the product, which may be especially
convenient. To strengthen the effect from this activity
it is possible to visualize statements in the form of
pictures or a mini-presentation, the positive effect of
visualization on learning being widely recognized.
Activity 4: making up a final spoken report on the
topic in the form of a short talk on a service or product
suggested by railways to stay competitive on the
passenger market. Unlike the reading comprehension
stage, the final report was of individual
accountability. Preparing each learner had to make
several decisions, namely, which information chunks
from the text read to use in a new one, which service
or product to describe, what to tell about it and how.
In fact, reports presented model texts modified by the
learners to the degree corresponding to their language
level. The weakest learners just changed a few words,
the strongest ones followed the logic suggested by the
model text but made their talks longer and more
detailed. The reports were presented orally to the
group and assessed by the teacher.
In fact, we can interpret all activities above as a
MCQs-based multi-skill activity going through
several stages – reception (in the example it is
reading), reproduction (in writing and oral) and
production (presenting short topic-related reports) –
to activate background and language knowledge and
skills and acquire new ones to produce a target type
of product.
3.4 Discussion
The MCQs-based multi-skill activity is evidently
constructed in the way that makes the learning easier.
Consecutive processing of the input material takes
learners from understanding a longer detailed text to
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producing a topic-related shorter one. Meanwhile, the
psychological evidence shows that it is more difficult
learning process that increases the learners’
engagement and facilitates the long-term retention
and transfer of skills or knowledge (see e.g., Healy &
Sinclair, 1996). It challenges the learning process
based on the MCQ technique, and makes us bring up
several questions and seek answers for them.
And the first question is whether the negative
effect on long term retention and transfer from the use
of MCQs does arise, and if it does, how it can be
neutralised. It seems feasible to avoid unfavourable
consequences with the help of cooperative, or
collaborative, learning which involves every learner
and maximises the benefits of cooperation among
mixed-ability and mixed-proficiency group members
(Jacobs & Renandya, 2018). In a use described some
of the cooperative learning principles were easily
applied, for instance, peer interaction and equal
opportunity to participate (activities two and three) as
well as individual accountability (activity four).
Numerous cooperative learning techniques and their
variations in existence, it is up to the teacher to select
most suitable ones for a specific classroom situation.
The second question concerns optimal conditions
for the application of MCQs as an intermodal activity.
As this technique lends a helping hand, it is presumed
that these are low-level language learners who find it
difficult to reach thorough understanding of
linguistically complex occupation-related material
that may particularly benefit from it. The pilot use
backed this logical assumption up. However, on this
stage it is not clear if MCQs in their new role may suit
a variety of learning situations, for example,
autonomous training beyond the classroom and e-
learning, shaping the skills and leading to the result
desired.
As foreign language study groups at non-language
universities tend to be formed with no consideration
for students’ language level, teachers face classes
comprising students of nearly a full range of levels
from false beginners to intermediate and higher. Such
classroom situation is a real challenge for a teacher
who has to seek for methods to engage and lead every
learner to success. With MCQs as an intermodal
activity, good opportunities for differentiated
learning are strongly felt. For example, lower-level
learners can be given a set of MCQs ordered logically
to simplify the comprehension procedure while
higher-level ones can be supplied with a set of
randomly organized items to be answered and then
ordered logically for further re-production task.
Another possible way to differentiate is to make the
final task more difficult and complex for more
proficient learners. It is worth then exploring the
MCQs potential for differentiated learning as another
promising aspect.
Finally, the last but not the least issue that has to
be studied more thoroughly deals with vocabulary.
Does a MCQs-based multi-skill activity create
conditions for vocabulary to transit from reception to
production? The possibility of using the target words
on all stages of the described MCQs-based activity
provided multiple retrievals, which is stated to be one
of the key factors to transfer vocabulary from short to
long term memory so that the learners recall the
words easily (Wesche & Paribakht, 2000). But
whether it is enough for long-term retention is a task
for further experimental evidence with the use of
methods proved reliable in vocabulary investigations.
4 CONCLUSIONS
The use of MCQs makes it possible to expand the list
of ‘high-capacity’ teaching techniques which can
bridge receptive and productive / interactive language
uses minimizing the transit time between them, which
is an essential benefit in short course conditions
typical for occupational domain. The outcomes of the
pilot uses look promising and encourage to further
explore the potential of this technique in a number of
areas, among which are, primarily, optimal
application conditions from the standpoint of learning
benefits for different categories of language learners
and the extent of its possible use in and beyond the
classroom, including e-learning, as well as the issue
of incidental vocabulary acquisition.
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