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Quiz questions for higher order thinking

  |  5 min read

Well-designed quiz questions can assess higher-order thinking skills such as interpretation, application, analysis, inference, and problem-solving. These kinds of questions not only deepen student learning but also give you better insight into how well students can use what they’ve learned.

Below are examples of quiz questions that promote higher-order thinking, along with explanations of why they work.

Applying knowledge in context

This type of question asks students to evaluate multiple pieces of information and determine what matters most in a real-world scenario. It promotes judgment, prioritization, and the ability to apply knowledge in context.

Example

This example reflects a scenario commonly used in nursing courses. 

A nurse is visiting a patient at home. The patient is a 78-year-old male who has had Parkinson’s disease for the past five years. Which of the following observations has the greatest implications for the patient’s care?

  1. The patient’s grandchildren have not been to visit for more than a month.
  2. The patient’s home has numerous throw rugs.
  3. The patient has a towel wrapped around his neck that his wife uses to wipe his face.
  4. The patient is gripping the arms of his chair tightly.

Tips to try this in your quiz

  • Replace recall-based questions with short, realistic scenarios from your field
  • Ask students to identify the most important or most appropriate response

Drawing conclusions from multiple sources

This type of question requires students to combine multiple pieces of information to determine an outcome. It strengthens analytical thinking and the ability to work across concepts.

Example

This example reflects a type of problem commonly used in economics courses. 

If the nominal gross national product (GNP) increases at a rate of 10% per year and the GNP deflator increases at 8% each year, then the real GNP ____.

  1. remains constant
  2. increases by 10%
  3. decreases by 8%
  4. increases by 2%

Tips to try this in your quiz

  • Provide two or more inputs that must be considered together
  • Ask students to calculate, predict, or determine an outcome

Analyzing relationships and analogies

This type of question asks students to analyze relationships between concepts and identify parallel structures. It promotes abstract reasoning and deeper conceptual understanding.

Example

This example reflects a type of reasoning task used across many disciplines.

E-mail is to unmoderated Listserv as office hours are to:

  1. Class lecture
  2. Class discussion
  3. Review sessions
  4. Tutorials

Tips to try this in your quiz

  • Ask students to compare relationships, not just define terms
  • Use analogies or pairings that require conceptual understanding

Interpreting data and evaluating claims

This type of question asks students to interpret data and evaluate the accuracy of conclusions. It builds critical thinking and evidence-based reasoning skills.

Example

This example reflects a type of question commonly used in data-rich disciplines. Assume that students are shown a bar chart before the question is provided. 

Based on the bar chart showing international drug usage rates and without any other data, which conclusions can you draw from Figure 17?

  1. An average American uses more drugs than citizens of any country except the United Kingdom.
  2. An average Mexican or Chilean consumes fewer drugs than citizens from other countries.
  3. Americans are more likely than citizens of other countries to use new drugs.
  4. The Japanese have regulations that make it difficult to obtain new drugs.

Tips to try this in your quiz

  • Incorporate charts, graphs, or tables into your questions
  • Ask students to evaluate each answer choice based on the data

Identifying causal relationships

This type of question requires students to understand cause-and-effect relationships and how multiple factors interact. It supports systems thinking and deeper analysis.

Example

This example reflects a type of question commonly used in history courses. 

Which of these historical developments in Western Europe caused the other three?

  1. Decline of trade
  2. Fall of Rome
  3. Breakdown of central government
  4. Rise in the power of the Roman Catholic Church

Tips to try this in your quiz

  • Ask students to identify causes, not just describe events
  • Include answer choices that are all plausible factors

Extracting and applying information from limited data

This type of question challenges students to extract meaning from a limited dataset and apply their knowledge across multiple prompts. It develops pattern recognition and analytical efficiency.

Example

This example reflects a type of task commonly used in science courses.

Based on three chemical symbols labeled A, B, and C. Which of the elements has:

  1. the largest atomic weight?
  2. the largest atomic number?
  3. the lowest boiling point?
  4. the lowest melting point?
  5. the highest density?
  6. the fewest electrons?
  7. the fewest protons?

Tips to try this in your quiz

  • Provide a shared dataset or scenario with multiple follow-up prompts
  • Ask students to apply different concepts to the same information

Higher-order quiz questions don’t have to be longer or more complicated, but they should be more intentional. By designing questions that require students to think, apply, and analyze, you turn quizzes into meaningful learning opportunities rather than simple checkpoints.