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Biased or Unbiased

  •  English    20     Public
    Biased or Unbiased
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  • Everyone knows that online learning is boring, right?
    Biased. Uses emotional language and assumes a negative opinion.
  •  5
  • Only the top students were asked if the test was difficult.
    Biased. The sample is not representative.
  •  5
  • Do you think the new canteen food is much better than before?
    Biased. Suggests that it is better, influencing responses.
  •  5
  • Why do students hate doing homework?
    Biased. Assumes that all students hate homework.
  •  5
  • Don’t you agree that our school is the best in the city?
    Biased. The question leads respondents to agree.
  •  5
  • Do you support our great principal’s wonderful new rules?
    Biased. Contains positive adjectives that cause emotional bias.
  •  5
  • A survey about sports was done only among the basketball team.
    Biased. The sample is too specific, not general.
  •  5
  • Shouldn’t students have less homework to enjoy their free time?
    Biased. The question encourages agreement with one side.
  •  5
  • Our brand is the most trusted by all students.
    Biased. Makes an absolute claim without evidence.
  •  5
  • We asked 5 of my friends about the school uniform and all said yes.
    Biased. The sample size is too small and not random.
  •  5
  • What do you think about our school?
    Unbiased. Open-ended; allows any opinion
  •  5
  • Do you prefer online or face-to-face classes?
    Unbiased. Offers neutral choices.
  •  5
  • How do you feel about the amount of homework you receive?
    Unbiased. Encourages honest response without leading words.
  •  5
  • A random group of 30 students from all grades was surveyed.
    Unbiased. Uses random selection, avoiding sample bias.
  •  5
  • Which subject do you find most interesting and why?
    Unbiased. Allows multiple opinions; not one-sided.
  •  5
  • Do you think school uniforms are a good idea?
    Unbiased. Simple yes/no question without influence.
  •  5