What a reading MCQ is: A multiple-choice (Multiple-Choice / Mehrfachauswahl) reading question gives you a question about the text and several options — usually labelled A, B, C, D. Exactly one is correct. You choose that one. It's marked objectively: right answer = the mark, wrong answer = nothing, with no half-marks. Because the text stays in front of you, you don't recall the answer — you locate it.
- die Multiple-Choice-Frage / die Mehrfachauswahl
- multiple choice
- die Option / die Antwort
- the option / the answer
- wähle / kreuze an
- choose / tick (the command word)
- der Distraktor
- a distractor — a wrong option made to look tempting
- die richtige Option
- the correct option (there is only one)
- dem Text zufolge / laut Text
- according to the text (your answer must be supported by it)
One correct, all-or-nothing: There is always exactly one correct option, and it is all-or-nothing — no marks for a close miss. So never settle for the option that looks about right: find the one the text actually proves.
How the options are built: Understanding how the options are written is half the battle. One option matches the text; the others are distractors. The most dangerous distractor reuses a word from the text but misreads its meaning — it looks familiar, so it feels right. Read the table, then watch out for that trap.
| Merkmal | Wie es bei der Mehrfachauswahl funktioniert |
|---|---|
| Zahl der richtigen Optionen | genau eine |
| Wie bewertet wird | objektiv: richtig = die Marke, falsch = nichts, keine halben Marken |
| Muss man schreiben? | nein, du wählst nur den Buchstaben der Option |
| Die Distraktoren | oft greifen sie ein Wort aus dem Text auf, aber mit falscher Bedeutung |
| Dein Beweis | die richtige Option muss sich mit einer Zeile aus dem Text belegen lassen |
| Darfst du noch einmal lesen? | ja, der Text liegt vor dir |
A repeated word is not proof: Just because an option contains a word that appears in the text does not make it correct. The exam writers do this on purpose. Match the meaning of the whole sentence, not a single word.
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A reliable MCQ routine: Don't read the options and pick a feeling. Use a routine: read the question and every option first, then find the part of the text, read it closely, eliminate the distractors, and only then choose. The text is visible, so this is fast and certain.
Crack a reading MCQ — 5 steps
Read
Read the question and ALL of the options before touching the text — know what you're choosing between.
Find
Scan the text for the relevant part — the line that the question is about.
Read closely
Read that sentence carefully and in full. The meaning of the whole line decides it, not one word.
Eliminate
Cross out the distractors — especially any option that just repeats a text word but misreads it.
Choose
Choose the one option the text actually proves.
Read → Find → Read closely → Eliminate → Choose
Eliminate before you choose: It is often easier to rule options out than to spot the right one. Eliminate every option the text clearly contradicts — what's left is your answer, and you'll have already checked the line that proves it.
A reading MCQ in action: Here is a short text — the kind Paper 2 (Reading) gives you. The text stays in front of you, so you locate the answer rather than recall it. Read it once for the gist (tap Übersetzung anzeigen if you get stuck), then we'll take one multiple-choice question through the routine.
Die Hauptstraße ohne Autos: Letztes Jahr beschloss die Stadtverwaltung von Talheim, die Hauptstraße sonntagvormittags für den Verkehr zu sperren. Am Anfang protestierten einige Geschäftsleute, weil sie fürchteten, ohne Autos in der Nähe ihrer Läden weniger zu verkaufen.
Nach ein paar Monaten änderten dieselben Geschäftsleute jedoch ihre Meinung. Jetzt spazieren die Familien in Ruhe durch die Straße, die Kinder spielen ohne Gefahr, und viele Cafés haben Tische auf den Gehweg gestellt. Die Umsätze sind laut dem Händlerverband um zehn Prozent gestiegen.
- die Stadtverwaltung / die Gemeinde
- the town council / local authority
- für den Verkehr sperren
- to close to traffic
- der/die Geschäftsleute
- the shopkeepers / traders
- fürchten
- to fear, to be afraid
- die Umsätze
- the sales / takings
- der Gehweg / der Bürgersteig
- the pavement / sidewalk
IB-style task — choosing the right option
Eine Multiple-Choice-Frage, Schritt für Schritt
- Read the question and all options — „Dem Text zufolge, was geschah mit den Umsätzen der Läden? A) Sie sanken · B) Sie stiegen um zehn Prozent · C) Sie änderten sich nicht · D) Die Läden schlossen.“
- Locate the line. Scan for „Umsätze“: „Die Umsätze sind laut dem Händlerverband um zehn Prozent gestiegen.“
- Eliminate, then choose — A und C widersprechen „gestiegen“; D greift das Wort „schließen/sperren“ auf, aber die Läden schlossen nicht. Die Zeile beweist B.
Check the whole line, beat the trap: Option D borrowed the word „schließen/sperren“ straight from the text — a textbook distractor. Reading the whole line in context is what beats it: „für den Verkehr sperren“ is about cars, not the shops.
Know your predicted grade
Take timed mock exams and get detailed feedback on every answer. See exactly where you're losing marks.
Where MCQ marks are lost: Most multiple-choice marks are lost to two traps: the word-match trap (an option repeats a text word but misreads the meaning) and deciding on half a sentence (choosing before you've read the whole line). Compare the two columns.
Gute Praxis
- Read every option before going to the text.
- Read the WHOLE relevant sentence, not half of it.
- Eliminate options the text clearly contradicts.
- Choose the option the text actually proves, even if its words differ.
Typische Fehler
- Pick the option that shares a word with the text (the word-match trap).
- Decide on half a sentence, before reading the full line.
- Choose by gut feeling without locating the proving line.
- Assume the matching words mean the matching answer.
The word-match trap: If an option repeats a word from the text, be more suspicious, not less. The exam writers plant that word on purpose. Check the whole sentence — the repeated word often appears in a completely different meaning.