Having issues with Questionmark and can’t find the answer you’re looking for? Don’t worry, we’re here to help!
There are a few things you may want to think about before starting to create questions in Questionmark.
Questions (and assessments) in Questionmark OnDemand (QMOD) are grouped and stored in topics. The Assessment team create top-level topic folders and these are named using the module code. This makes it easy to locate and identify questions/assessments that need to be published and scheduled to students.

Questionmark: Topics Screen
Once logged into QMOD, click on Authoring then select Standard Item Bank from the drop-down menu. Once you have been allocated permissions to the top-level topic, you can create sub-topics and organise these in different ways depending on your requirements. If starting a question bank from scratch, it’s a good time to think about how you want to group your questions, especially if you want to use and present topic outcomes to students*, or randomly select questions from topic folders when building your assessment. You might choose to group questions with a similar theme, subject or purpose.
QMOD is setup to allow collaborative authoring, so if several members of staff require access to the same topic, contact the Assessment team with the staff names and the topic folder(s) they require access to. You can also request access to an existing topic.
To create a new topic sub-folder, right-click on the name of the existing topic folder and select New. Enter an appropriate name for your sub-topic and press Enter.
When it comes to naming your topics and questions, try and think about how to identify these clearly. You may end up wanting to display topic outcome results to students, and question names will display in any results you view/export, so having a clear and unique name for these can be helpful. Here is some key guidance to follow:
Before you start writing and creating questions for your assessment you may want to consider what you want to assess and how you want students to answer the question. You can read the descriptions for all the question types available in QMOD Authoring* to gain background knowledge of your options and then it’s usually a good idea to login to QMOD and try-out the different question types available to you.
We have created a generic example assessment for staff to allow you to familiarise yourself with some of the question types available to you in QMOD. (Access to the example assessment is anonymous and answers are not recorded.)
Check out the Questionmark support site for lots of advice and information. You may need to sign up for a Questionmark Communities/Support account in order to access the information.
See our guide on Creating questions in QMOD – the basics.