JohnR7: If you take a exam for a course, how do you determine the answers the instructor is looking for?
DNAunion: Did you attend all the lectures, read all the handouts, and do all the assigments? If so, you should know what answers the instructor is looking for.
JohnR7: If you answer the questions correctly, but you do not give the exact answer the instructor was looking for, then do you think you would or should score as high on the exam?
DNAunion: Depends on what you mean by answering the questions correctly. If the question is, "
How does evolution explain the diversity of life?" and you give as the "correct answer", "
Evolution is a lie - and that's the truth!", then you should get that question wrong.
However, if your answer is actually correct in the eyes of science (assuming this is a science class), then you should ask your instructor why points were deducted.
As an example, I remember telling my nieces that water is not a good conductor of electricity. They then, coincidentally, had that asked on a test: "Water is a good conductor of electricity: True or False". They answered false and the teacher marked it wrong. They should have argued the point because in fact water is NOT a good conductor of electricity.
Another one came to mind. I remember in one of my beginning biology classes one of the questions on the test was, "
ATP is a nucleotide: True or False". I answered false and the instructor marked it wrong. I debated that and documented my argument. First, I showed him that in our text ATP was stated to be a
nucleotide derivative. Next I showed him that our text stated a nucleotide was a nucleoside
monophosphate (not a nucleoside
triphosphate, like ATP). He agreed to count my answer as correct.