The EdFund site provides a service to school Financial Aid offices, which is to provide a simple online tutorial for learning about Financial Aid obligations which students take on when they receive aid. Only after students successfully complete the quiz do schools release aid.
Users can take a practice test as many times as they want. To log into University Of Baltimore's quiz, go to EdFund.org , and choose the "Take Practice Test" checkbox and click through to "Game Setup".
The whole site has been designed to the nines by a rigorous process and has few loose ends. Content metaphors and assets have all been designed to dig deep into user's sub conscious experience of positive child-hood game play, to side-step any negative thoughts about incurring the huge financial obligations of graduate school, and replace them with positive solutions like getting a part-time job, living on campus, or as a last resort moving back in with parents. The next button graphic is an animated game spinner which rotates when moused over. The site is designed with tables, and doesn't seem to degrade at all from resizing text, which I can't quite figure out.
The answers to the questions are always on the same page as the quiz. However, the topic is fairly complicated and the test is designed to require you to actually read the content. Successful completion of the test questions provides a way to guarantee that students demonstrate an understanding of certain issues. Each quiz presents a set of questions and correct answers and requeires the user to match the correct question with the correct answer. Upon reflection this is a way to have a multiple choice test which presents no (potentially confusing) incorrect information.
I like this format and intend to copy it for CluelessPC's content pages.