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Take the Single Question Quiz

Test Your Focus with One Quick Question

Difficulty: Moderate
Questions: 20
Learning OutcomesStudy Material
Colorful paper art depicting a trivia quiz with a single question.

Looking to challenge learners with a focused quiz experience? Joanna Weib invites educators, trainers, and curious minds to dive into this engaging Single”Question Quiz , designed for swift assessment. Ideal for quick knowledge checks or icebreakers, this versatile Single-Question Multiple-Choice Quiz template helps you gauge understanding instantly. Take advantage of our intuitive editor to customise questions, adapt difficulty, and share through your favorite quizzes platform. Start testing your knowledge or refine your teaching toolkit in seconds - no complex setup required.

What distinguishes a premise from a conclusion in an argument?
A premise is irrelevant information and a conclusion just follows.
A premise is always controversial and a conclusion is always accepted.
A premise provides support and a conclusion is the inferred claim.
A premise is the final claim and a conclusion is supporting evidence.
A premise offers reasons or evidence, while a conclusion is the statement derived from those reasons. This distinction is fundamental in logical analysis.
Which form of reasoning applies general principles to specific cases?
Deductive reasoning
Abductive reasoning
Inductive reasoning
Analogical reasoning
Deductive reasoning starts with a general rule and applies it to a particular instance to reach a certain conclusion. This is the hallmark of deductive logic.
Which logical fallacy attacks the person instead of their argument?
Straw man fallacy
Ad hominem fallacy
False dilemma fallacy
Slippery slope fallacy
An ad hominem fallacy targets the individual rather than addressing the substance of their argument. It diverts attention from the logic of the claim.
In logic, what term refers to a flaw in reasoning that weakens an argument?
Paradox
Syllogism
Fallacy
Analogy
A fallacy is an error in reasoning that undermines the validity of an argument. Recognizing fallacies is key to critical evaluation.
Which cognitive shortcut estimates probability based on how easily examples come to mind?
Availability heuristic
Representativeness heuristic
Anchoring bias
Confirmation bias
The availability heuristic judges likelihood by how quickly instances are recalled. This can distort probability estimates when memorable examples dominate.
What type of reasoning uses specific observations to form general conclusions?
Deductive reasoning
Abductive reasoning
Analogical reasoning
Inductive reasoning
Inductive reasoning extrapolates from particular instances to broader generalizations. It is probabilistic rather than certain.
Evaluate the validity of the syllogism: All A are B; All B are C; therefore, all A are C. Is this valid or invalid?
Invalid
Valid
Unsound
Ambiguous
This is a classic valid categorical syllogism because the conclusion follows necessarily from the premises. Validity concerns logical form, not truth of premises.
Identify the fallacy: "If we allow event A, next we'll get event Z."
Slippery slope fallacy
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Appeal to authority
Hasty generalization
A slippery slope fallacy assumes without justification that one event will inevitably lead to an extreme outcome. It exaggerates causal links.
In problem solving, breaking a complex problem into smaller pieces is known as what?
Abstraction
Decomposition
Heuristic
Algorithm
Decomposition divides a complex issue into manageable parts. This makes analysis and solution design more systematic.
Which bias causes people to favor information that confirms their existing beliefs?
Framing effect
Confirmation bias
Availability heuristic
Hindsight bias
Confirmation bias leads individuals to seek or interpret information that supports their preconceptions. It hinders objective evaluation.
If John's mother is Mary's daughter, how is Mary related to John?
Sister
Aunt
Grandmother
Mother
If John's mother is Mary's daughter, then Mary must be the mother of his mother, making her John's grandmother. This uses family relationships logically.
Determine if this syllogism is valid: No reptiles are warm-blooded; all snakes are reptiles; therefore no snakes are warm-blooded.
Valid
Invalid
Unsound
Circular reasoning
This syllogism is valid because the conclusion follows logically from the premises. All snakes inherit the property of reptiles in this argument.
What decision-making tool assigns weights to criteria and scores options accordingly?
SWOT analysis
Six Thinking Hats
Weighted scoring model
Decision tree
A weighted scoring model quantifies and compares options by assigning importance weights to evaluation criteria. It structures complex decisions.
Find the next number in the sequence: 2, 5, 10, 17, ...
28
27
29
26
The differences increase by odd numbers (3,5,7,9), so the next difference is 11 and 17+11=28. Recognizing the pattern is key.
What type of reasoning draws parallels between similar cases to support a conclusion?
Deductive reasoning
Analogical reasoning
Abductive reasoning
Inductive reasoning
Analogical reasoning compares two similar situations to infer that what is true in one holds in the other. It relies on parallel features.
What is the contrapositive of the statement "If it rains, then the ground is wet"?
If the ground is not wet, then it rains
If the ground is wet, then it rained
If the ground is not wet, then it does not rain
If it does not rain, then the ground is not wet
The contrapositive flips and negates both parts: "If not Q, then not P." Here Q is "ground is wet" and P is "it rains."
Three people A, B, and C: A says "B is the truth-teller," B says "C is the liar," and C says "I am the alternator." One always tells the truth, one always lies, one alternates. Who is the truth-teller?
A
B
Cannot be determined
C
If B always tells truth, then C is the liar as B says. A must be the alternator telling a true statement here, and C lies. This assignment is consistent.
Given premises "If A then B," "If B then C," and "Not C," what can be validly concluded?
Not A
Not B
C
A
From "If B then C" and "Not C," contrapositive gives "Not B." Then from "If A then B" and "Not B," contrapositive yields "Not A."
In Bayes' theorem, what does P(E | H) represent?
Marginal likelihood
Posterior probability
Likelihood
Prior probability
P(E | H) is the likelihood, the probability of evidence E assuming hypothesis H is true. It is a core component in updating beliefs.
In the Wason selection task for the rule "If a card has a vowel on one side, then it has an even number on the other," which cards must you turn over to test the rule?
A and 4
A and 7
E and 7
E and 4
To disprove the rule you must check a vowel (A) for an odd number and an odd number (7) for a vowel. These choices test both directions.
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Learning Outcomes

  1. Analyse the core concept behind each question.
  2. Evaluate quick decision-making skills under time constraints.
  3. Identify essential knowledge points in a single prompt.
  4. Demonstrate rapid recall with focused questioning.
  5. Apply logical reasoning to determine the correct answer.

Cheat Sheet

  1. Pinpoint the Core Concept - Kick off your study session by spotting key terms and the main idea in each question. This quick-scan strategy helps you grasp the essence of any problem in seconds, so you can dive straight into solving it like a pro. Improve Your Decision-Making Skills By Doing This One Simple Thing
  2. Master the Two-Minute Rule - Boost your speed under pressure by giving yourself just two minutes to decide and act. This playful countdown keeps you focused, stops overthinking in its tracks, and turns you into a rapid-response wizard. 5 Powerful Decision Making Skills to Help Make Decisions Fast
  3. Filter Out the Noise - Zero in on the 20% of information that matters most and ignore the rest. By chucking distractions aside, you'll power through prompts with laser clarity and save brainpower for the big stuff. Improve Your Decision-Making Skills By Doing This One Simple Thing
  4. Practice Speedy Recall - Turn memory drills into a game by timing yourself on flashcards or mini-quizzes. Consistent retrieval under the clock strengthens your neurons and makes recall feel as easy as snapping your fingers. 5 Powerful Decision Making Skills to Help Make Decisions Fast
  5. Apply the OODA Loop - Use the Observe-Orient-Decide-Act cycle to tackle complex questions in a structured way. This battle-tested framework keeps your thinking agile, helping you adjust on the fly and zero in on the best answer. Effective Decision Making: Time Management in Decision-Making Processes
  6. Prioritize with the Eisenhower Matrix - Sort tasks by urgency and importance to see at a glance where to focus first. By categorizing "Do," "Schedule," "Delegate," and "Eliminate," you'll slice through your to-do list like a ninja. Master Decision Making Time Management for Success & Efficiency
  7. Harness the Pareto Principle - Learn to spot the crucial 20% of tasks that yield 80% of your results. Focusing your study energy here skyrockets your productivity and ensures you're always studying smart, not just hard. Effective Decision Making: Time Management in Decision-Making Processes
  8. Embrace the Pomodoro Technique - Work in laser-focused 25-minute sprints followed by playful breaks to recharge. This rhythmic cycle keeps your brain fresh and attention sharp, so even long study marathons feel doable. Master Decision Making Time Management for Success & Efficiency
  9. Build Handy Mental Models - Create simple frameworks in your mind to decode complex topics in a flash. Whether it's comparing, mapping, or chunking info, mental models turn confusion into "aha!" moments. Time Efficiency: Quick Decision Making to Save Time
  10. Limit Your Options - Avoid decision paralysis by narrowing your choices to the top few. With fewer paths to explore, you'll pick confidently and quickly, leaving more brainpower for the real challenge. 5 Powerful Decision Making Skills to Help Make Decisions Fast
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