1.
a. I am drawn away from excessive solitude.
b. I am drawn away from excessive interaction.
B.
2.
a. I can instantly tell you whether something is morally wrong or right.
b. I easily pick up on nuance and subtlety.
c. I am keenly aware of my physical environment, and of details.
d. I can instantly tell you whether something is factually true or false.
B (but really, none of the above - I'm often too oblivious to pick up on *anything* - but B's a better option than the others.
3a. Only answer if you chose
a or d for question 2!
a. I easily pick up on nuance and subtlety.
b. I am keenly aware of my physical environment, and of details.
A (more that it's definitely not B)
4.
a. I value order, and I follow plans.
b. I can accept disorder, and I value spontaneity.
B - but iffy, depending on the circumstances.
5.
a. I always make an effort to be sympathetic.
b. I always make an effort to be correct.
Neither. This is a "which of your kids do you love more?" type of question. The real answer is "I try to deliver the truth, as objectively as I can, with compassion." Lack of either is not something I find acceptable in myself.
6.
a. After several hours in a group, I may become uncomfortable.
b. After several hours alone, I may become uncomfortable.
A.
7.
a. I prefer hard facts.
b. I prefer generalities.
B, mostly.
So your test gives me INxP, which is at least somewhat accurate, as far as it goes. But like some others have said, I think this test is WAY too short to be dependable in general. You're only going to identify people correctly who identify VERY strongly with a certain type, and even that not reliably - the sample size for each characteristic you're trying to evaluate is very small (it's *1* for T/F!). I know that you're just trying to provide a gateway into typing for people who aren't familiar with it, but even for those purposes, I think you'd be better off expanding your test to at *least* twice its current size (at that point, you might as well find an existing, longer test you like), and follow up with providing resources for people to learn more (this might very well be your plan anyway). Any test, especially a short one, is much less likely to be accurate than a self (or better, professionally administered) evaluation based on a broader set of information.