Tutoring an adult on GED test things and some of the questions are worded in ways that confused her.
It was like "what's an issue the entire country can vote on?"
The choices were
School Superintendent
Mayor
President
Library Bond
She nixed School Superintendent, Mayor, and Library Bond because they are local elections.
She said President.
The answer they were looking for though was Library Bond because it's an issue and the rest are voting for representatives.
I fully understand why she got confused but she just thinks she's stupid now.
Anyway, please send "you're not dumb that question wasn't great" vibes to Oklahoma for her.
She was literally crying from being overwhelmed.
We're going to get her through this but she needs help with the stresses of test questions
@[email protected] if it helps, my son (native English speaker) regularly loses points on multiple choice English text comprehension exercises in Italian school because the answers to the questions don't make sense or become ambiguous if you actually have a full understanding of the text - but are straight forward if you only know the English the syllabus expects you to know so far. Multiple choice questions are a great way of testing if you know a syllabus, and a terrible way of testing understanding.