Some body posted the text of the passage:IAAO wrote:Hi guys ,
I think the answer not castle because it one option from the answers .
I think it's fortress or picture .
Children could give different name for a
Another question that I have how many yes , no , ng in the last passage we had ? 3 or 4
Similar criticisms have been applied to psychological and educational tests. For example, Mehan points out how test questions may be interpreted in ways different from those intended by the researcher. In all language development test, children are presented with a picture of a medieval fortress, complete with moat, drawbridge, and parapets and three initial consonants: D, C, and G. The child is supposed to circle the correct initial consonant C for ‘castle’is correct, but many children choose D. After the test, when I asked those children what the name of the building was, they responded ‘Disneyland’. These children used the same line of reasoning intended by the tester, but they arrived at the wrong substantive answer. The score sheet showing a wrong answer does not document a child’s lack of reasoning ability; it only documents that the child indicated an answer different from the one the tester expected.
As I read through this I realised that the answer could be ''BUILDING''