Concept Maps für Prüfungsfragen: Aufgaben, Rubriken und Notizen in bessere Antworten verwandeln
Praktischer Leitfaden zum Analysieren von Prüfungsfragen mit Concept Maps, inklusive Vorlagen, Beispielen, Tabelle und FAQ.
Viele Lernende kennen den Stoff, beantworten aber nicht die eigentliche Aufgabe. Das Problem liegt oft nicht im Gedächtnis, sondern in der Deutung der Frage. Eine Concept Map trennt Operator, Umfang, Belege, Vergleich und Schlussfolgerung, bevor der erste Satz entsteht.
Kurz gefasst
- Commencez par la tâche: command word, scope, evidence, contrast, conclusion.
- Keep the map small: 8-15 nodes for most practice questions.
- Turn the rubric into branches before writing paragraphs.
- Practice 3 old questions each week and rebuild one map from memory.
- Use the guide, templates, and editor with localized link text only.
Warum eine Fragen-Map hilft
A concept map is a visual structure that connects ideas with labeled relationships. In this exam workflow, the labels show what the answer must do: explain, compare, evaluate, justify, or recommend. A rubric is a scoring guide; when you turn it into branches, marks become visible before writing starts.
For background, see concept map, testing effect, and Bloom's taxonomy. These references support the same principle: performance improves when learners retrieve, organize, and apply knowledge rather than reread it passively.
"A strong exam map should remove irrelevant material before it adds more facts. In 90 seconds, the learner should know the task, the evidence, and the judgment."
— Hommer Zhao, Knowledge Systems Researcher
| Focus | Weak habit | Better map move | Practical target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Command word | Describe everything | Name the required thinking move | 1 clear verb |
| Scope | Write the whole chapter | Mark what is inside and outside | 2-3 boundaries |
| Evidence | Assert from memory | Attach proof or example | 2 strong examples |
| Contrast | Mention only one side | Compare alternatives | 1 comparison branch |
| Conclusion | End with summary | State a judgment | 1 final claim |
5-Minuten-Ablauf vor dem Schreiben
1. Mark the command word
Do not start with facts. First identify whether the prompt asks you to describe, explain, compare, evaluate, justify, or recommend.
2. Turn the topic into a question
Instead of mapping a chapter title, write the real decision: what must this answer prove, separate, or choose?
3. Add rubric branches
Use branches for accuracy, reasoning, evidence, comparison, application, and conclusion. If you have no rubric, infer the branches from model answers.
4. Add examples and a boundary
Choose 2 examples that directly support the prompt and 1 limit or exception. This makes the answer more precise than a memorized paragraph.
"For scenario questions, the map must expose the decision. A list of facts can sound fluent while still missing the recommendation."
— Hommer Zhao, Knowledge Systems Researcher
Vorlagen zum Kopieren
Short answer template:
Prompt
-> command word
-> key definition
-> 2 linked facts
-> example
-> final sentence
Essay template:
Central question
-> thesis
-> criterion 1
-> evidence 1
-> criterion 2
-> evidence 2
-> counterpoint
-> final judgment
After marking, connect missed criteria to an error-log workflow with Error Log Concept Maps or strengthen retrieval with Retrieval Practice Concept Maps.
"A useful exam map is not decorative. It should make the answer easier to mark by showing claim, evidence, comparison, and judgment in the right order."
— Hommer Zhao, Knowledge Systems Researcher
FAQ
How many nodes should the map have?
For a short answer, 6-10 nodes are usually enough. For an essay, 10-18 nodes work better; beyond 25 nodes it becomes a topic summary.
How long should mapping take in a timed exam?
Most answers need 60-120 seconds. Longer essays can justify 3-5 minutes because the plan prevents irrelevant paragraphs.
Can this help with multiple-choice questions?
Yes. Use 5-8 nodes: concept, clue in the stem, common confusion, and why each distractor is wrong.
What should I do after feedback?
Turn every missed mark into a branch: weak evidence, missing comparison, unclear definition, no judgment, or poor time control.
Is this different from a normal study map?
Yes. A study map organizes a topic; an exam-question map organizes a task and the scoring logic behind it.
Nehmen Sie heute eine alte Prüfungsfrage und bauen Sie im Editor eine Map mit 10 Knoten. Für Kurse oder Teamtrainings nutzen Sie die Kontaktseite.