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Writing exercises: Multiple Problem Structure
While it's totally possible that you might create an exercise with a single type of problem, it's very likely that you'll want to provide students with multiple styles of problems to challenge them.
You will recall that the problem section of an exercise looks like this:
<div class="problems">
<div id="problem-type-or-description">
<p class="problem"><!-- An overview of the problem including all needed info. --></p>
<p class="question"><!-- The question to ask the student. --></p>
<p class="solution"><!-- The correct answer expected of the student. --></p>
</div>
</div>
When building an exercise with multiple problems, the problems part of the code will look like:
<div class="problems">
<div id="problem-type-or-description-ONE">
<p class="problem"><!-- An overview of the problem including all needed info. --></p>
<p class="question"><!-- The question to ask the student. --></p>
<p class="solution"><!-- The correct answer expected of the student. --></p>
</div>
<div id="problem-type-or-description-TWO">
<p class="problem"><!-- An overview of the problem including all needed info. --></p>
<p class="question"><!-- The question to ask the student. --></p>
<p class="solution"><!-- The correct answer expected of the student. --></p>
</div>
</div>
So all the problems exist between the <div class="problems">
wrapper and each different type of problem should have its own unique ID (examples below). Thankfully, you won't have to re-write the entire problem from scratch. You'll only have to write the new portions of the problem that differ from the original.
OR: If you are doing word problems and you do have similar problems that have completely different structures (e.g. multiplication word problems involving money and multiplication word problems involving objects), then this structure also allows you to change everything within unique problem ID: variables, overview, question, solution, hints, everything.
Let's go through each of these two examples of create multiple problem.
For expanding and extending an existing problem, the way you do it is by adding a unique ID to one of your problems and then referencing it from subsequent problems using a data-type="ID"
attribute.
For example one problem could ask for total distance travelled, another could ask for how long it took the travel the distance, etc. In the following markup we create two types of problems. One is the base or core problem (with the ID of "original") and the other is the problem that inherits from the original.
<div id="original">
<div class="problem">
<p>Ben traveled by <var>CAR1</var> at an avg speed of <var>SPEED1</var> mph.</p>
<p>He also traveled by <var>CAR2</var> at an avg speed of <var>SPEED2</var> mph.</p>
<p>The total distance covered was <var>DIST</var> miles for <var>TIME</var> hours.</p>
</div>
<p class="question">How many miles did Ben go by <var>VEHICLE1</var>? (Round to the nearest mile.)</p>
<p class="solution"><var>round(DIST1)</var></p>
</div>
<div id="vehicle-2-distance" data-type="original">
<p class="question">How many miles did Ben go by <var>VEHICLE2</var>? (Round to the nearest mile.)</p>
<p class="solution"><var>round(DIST2)</var></p>
</div>
Note how the second problem doesn't provide a problem definition. This problem definition is inherited directly from the original problem when we put in data-type="original"
next to "vehicle-2-distance." Any markup provided by a subsequent problem will override the original. For example providing a "question" in a follow-up problem will override the "question" coming from the original.
Using this technique you can easily generate many different styles of problems with only minimal amounts of typing.
In general, we would like exercises to be as modular as possible, so consider creating multiple separate exercises unless the problems you are considering are fundamentally very similar.
There are times where you will want two types of problems in the same exercise that share nothing in common, not even variables. The following is the basic layout for an X problem, X structure exercise (This is everything between the <div class="exercise">
tags:
<div class="problems">
<div id="problem-type-or-description-ONE">
<div class="vars">
<var id="NUM_1">randRange( 3, 12 )</var>
<var id="AMT_1">randRange( 2, 12 )</var>
</div>
<p class="problem">A scarf costs $<var>NUM_1</var>. You buy multiple scarves.</p>
<p class="question">How much would <var>AMT_1</var> scarves cost?</p>
<p class="solution"><var>NUM_1 * AMT_1</var></p>
<div class="hints">
<p>This is a multiplication question.</p>
<p>The answer is <var>NUM_1 * AMT_1</var> dollars.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="problem-type-or-description-TWO">
<div class="vars" data-ensure="PARENT_MULT * CHILD_AGE -19 > CHILD_AGE">
<var id="CHILD_AGE">randRange(2, 9)</var>
<var id="PARENT_MULT">randRange(2, 12)</var>
<!-- parent can be 108 years old max, reasonable -->
</div>
<p class="problem">Sally is <var>CHILD_AGE</var> years old.
Her mom is <var>PARENT_MULT</var> times older.</p>
<p class="question">How old is Sally's mom?</p>
<p class="solution"><var>PARENT_MULT * CHILD_AGE</var></p>
<div class="hints">
<p>"Times older" is a clue word for multiplication.</p>
<p>Sally's mom is <var>PARENT_MULT * CHILD_AGE</var> years old.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
As you can see, with this structure, each problem type is a completely self contained unit, where each problem type has defined its own variables, questions, solutions and hints.
There is more on Multiple Problems at: More on Multiple Problems
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