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Biased or Unbiased
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  • Each line maps to a question.
  • If the delimiter is used in a question, the question should be surrounded by double quotes: "My, question","My, answer"
  • The first answer in the multiple choice question must be the correct answer.






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