Statements A, B and D are correct, whereas C is incorrect. A is true because vague comments such as βgoodβ or βbadβ are less useful than specific remarks that indicate what worked and what needs improvement. B is true since focusing on behaviour and performance avoids attacking the learnerβs personality and supports growth. D is true because feedback that the receiver cannot understand will not help learning. C is false because effective feedback is not defined by long delay; in many cases, timely or even immediate feedback is more beneficial.
Option A:
Option A is incorrect because it includes only A and B and omits D, which is also a correct characteristic of effective feedback. Without D, the set of statements does not fully capture what makes feedback useful for the receiver. Therefore A and B only is incomplete.
Option B:
Option B is correct because it groups A, B and D, combining specificity, focus on behaviour and clarity for the receiver. It correctly leaves out C, which wrongly insists on delayed feedback as a requirement. As it contains all and only the correct statements, this option is the right answer.
Option C:
Option C is incorrect because it selects B and D only and leaves out A. While B and D are valid, excluding A ignores the crucial role of specificity. Thus this option does not present the complete profile of effective feedback.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect because it treats all four statements as correct, including C. Since C misrepresents feedback timing by making delay compulsory, this option mixes a false statement with true ones and cannot be accepted.
Comment Your Answer
Please login to comment your answer.
Sign In
Sign Up
Answers commented by others
No answers commented yet. Be the first to comment!