Does anybody have any other ideas for getting Maple TA content (questions/banks/modules)? The application center doesn't currently meet our schools needs, and the contacts I've met at conferences are very hesitant to share their content. I can appreciate that because I've spent countless hours this school year writing over 300 questions, and I too would be hesitant to simply give them away.
I feel I've become pretty good at writing all different types of questions. I am a former computer programmer and that background has definitely helped me write difficult algorithms and complex components of maple-graded questions. However, the question-writing task has become very tedious and time consuming for my school's needs. Our school is a tablet school which means we are doing away with the standard book/pencil/paper and are planning on using Maple TA as our primary homework & assessment tool in our math classrooms. Therefore, I have been writing anywhere from 20 to 50 questions per chapter, and our current Algebra I book has 12 chapters so you do the math.
We are definitely looking for other means of obtaining content. We are even open to purchasing questions from someone who has the content that we need. Our biggest needs are high-school level Geometry and Algebra 2/Trigonometry. Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
Any ideas getting started?
I am a new user to Maple TA. I am trying to author questions for Calc III. I know nothing about Maple or LaTeX. Are there any good sources? The maplesoft site is a joke when it comes to TA help for advanced Maple graded questions.
Maple TA 3.0 Question bank.
My 7-12 School has just purchased a site licence for 100 simultaneous users of Maple TA 3.0. We would like to work with you in creating question banks. We could write questions in the area you are missing and then we could trade. We are happy to follow your style. I personally will be writing questions for Physics.
regards Damien Bushby
Also new to Maple TA and wanting to author advanced ?'s
It is some consolation to see I am not the only one new to TA with both great interest in developing question banks (as the potential seems to be there in TA for interactive learning with immediate feedback) as well as some frustration in learning how to write what I assume are more involved questions. For instance, questions that appear to require "LaTex" for authoring interactive graphs. I too know nothing about "LaTex" and would love to have more accessible sources for learning than stumbling about the help menus. Doug's interest in sharing question banks (and at the same time his reluctance to give away his work without getting something in return) are good points. I hope to start using TA this fall for geometry and some algebra review as well as topics in the International Baccalaureate (IB) curriculum that include calculus, statistics, vectors, etc. I would have great interest in sharing my question banks if I start generating the kinds of non-trivial questions I hope to create. Meanwhile I am stuck on what I assume are basics in TA like using algorithmic variables to generate linear / quadratic graphs that change each time they are accessed (is this possible? The graphing option doesn't seem to support algorithmic variables) and stuck on even more basic details like getting Maple 11 to graph a function AND key points at the same time (I can't get Maple to execute "pointplot" and a function graph on the same axes... sigh...) which would be nice for letting students unambiguously identify key coordinates on a graph (exact coordinates of intercepts, max and min's, etc.)
- - Randy Carspecken
question banks
I agree with the lack of materials. Using the Maple graded type questions for complex problems is poorly supported. I am working on a question bank of all algorthmic questions for Calc III. All questions are variable and the answer combinations are endless for some problems.
Most of the examples are multiple choice, not formula/numeric oriented. If someone gets Calc II done, I would consider trading!