Difference between revisions of "MultipleChoiceProblems"
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− | Note that in this example we use old-style multiple choice answer objects. The new-style MathObjects have a multiple choice object as well, but its behavior is sufficiently different than that suggested here that is not documented here. |
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+ | We give two examples here. The first uses old-style answer checkers; the second newer parser based code. Note that the functionality that is provided in either case is different; the latter is syntactically cleaner and simpler, but doesn't have the same range of functions provided by the first. |
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− | [[ |
+ | [[Problem_Techniques|Problem Techniques Index]] |
+ | </p> |
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+ | |||
+ | <p> |
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+ | <strong>With Old-Style Answer Checkers</strong> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | <strong>With Newer Answer Checkers</strong> |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | |||
+ | <table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" border="0"> |
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+ | <tr valign="top"> |
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+ | <th> PG problem file </th> |
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+ | <th> Explanation </th> |
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+ | </tr> |
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+ | <tr valign="top"> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#ddffdd;border:black 1px dashed;"> |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | DOCUMENT(); |
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+ | |||
+ | loadMacros( |
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+ | "PGstandard.pl", |
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+ | "parserRadioButtons.pl", |
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+ | ); |
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+ | |||
+ | </pre> |
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+ | </td> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#ccffcc;padding:7px;"> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | <b>Initialization:</b> Include <code>parserRadioButtons.pl</code> in the list of loaded macro files. This allows use of radio buttons (all options are shown, with a select-one button in front of each). We could also use <code>parserPopUp.pl</code> instead, which would allow creation of a drop-down menu of options. This is noted below as well. |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | </td> |
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+ | </tr> |
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+ | <tr valign="top"> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#ffffdd;border:black 1px dashed;"> |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | $mc = RadioButtons( |
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+ | [ "Blue", "Red", "Green", |
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+ | "None of the above" ], |
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+ | "Blue" ); |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | </td> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#ffffcc;padding:7px;"> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | <b>Setup:</b> We create a radio button object with <code>RadioButtons</code>. The first argument is a reference to a list of options: <code>["Blue","Red",...]</code>, and the second is the correct answer, which needs to be one of the options. |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | To create a drop-down ("pop-up") option (having loaded <code>parserPopUp.pl</code>, of course), we use the same syntax: |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | $mc = PopUp( |
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+ | [ "?", "Blue", "Red", "Green", |
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+ | "None of the above" ], |
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+ | "Blue" ); |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | Note that in this case we should specify a generic non-answer as the first option, so that when the selector is displayed it does not automatically give the student an answer (which may or may not be correct). |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | </td> |
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+ | </tr> |
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+ | <tr valign="top"> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#ffdddd;border:black 1px dashed;"> |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | BEGIN_TEXT |
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+ | What color most resembles the sky? |
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+ | $BR |
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+ | \{ $mc->buttons() \} |
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+ | END_TEXT |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#ffcccc;padding:7px;"> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | <b>Main text:</b> In the text section we print the question and radio buttons giving the answers. For a PopUp object, the call to create the menu of options is <code>$mc->menu()</code>. |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | </td> |
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+ | </tr> |
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+ | <tr valign="top"> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#eeddff;border:black 1px dashed;"> |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | $showPartialCorrectAnswers = 0; |
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+ | |||
+ | ANS( $mc->cmp() ); |
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+ | |||
+ | ENDDOCUMENT(); |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | <td style="background-color:#eeccff;padding:7px;"> |
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+ | <p> |
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+ | <b>Answer Evaluation:</b> In most cases we will want to set <code>$showPartialCorrectAnswers</code> to <code>0</code> (false) for multiple choice problems. Otherwise, students can use the feedback or the partial credit received to guess and check if their answers are correct. |
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+ | We grade the problem as expected. |
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+ | </p> |
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+ | </td> |
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+ | </tr> |
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+ | </table> |
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+ | |||
<p style="text-align:center;"> |
<p style="text-align:center;"> |
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− | [[ |
+ | [[Problem_Techniques|Problem Techniques Index]] |
</p> |
</p> |
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Revision as of 09:41, 20 June 2013
Multiple Choice Problems: PG Code Snippet
This code snippet shows the essential PG code to include a multiple-choice question in a problem.
For an example of a multiple choice problem in which the choices are graphs, see Example 1 of GraphsInTables
We give two examples here. The first uses old-style answer checkers; the second newer parser based code. Note that the functionality that is provided in either case is different; the latter is syntactically cleaner and simpler, but doesn't have the same range of functions provided by the first.
With Old-Style Answer Checkers
PG problem file | Explanation |
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DOCUMENT(); loadMacros( "PGstandard.pl", "PGchoicemacros.pl", ); |
Initialization: Include |
$mc = new_multiple_choice(); $mc->qa( "What is your favorite color?", "blue" ); $mc->extra( "red", "green", ); $mc->makeLast("none of the above"); |
Setup: Create a new multiple choice object with
To make answers appear in a certain order (e.g., Yes followed by No and Maybe), use @quest = ("How many legs do cats have?", "How many legs to ostriches have?"); @ans = ("4","2"); $pick = random(0,1,1); $mc->new_checkbox_multiple_choice(); $mc->qa($quest[$pick],$ans[$pick]); $mc->makeLast("2","4","None of the above"); |
BEGIN_TEXT \{ $mc->print_q() \} $BR \{ $mc->print_a() \} END_TEXT |
Main text: In the text section we print the question and answers. |
$showPartialCorrectAnswers = 0; ANS( radio_cmp( $mc->correct_ans() ) ); ENDDOCUMENT(); |
Answer Evaluation: In most cases we will want to set |
With Newer Answer Checkers
PG problem file | Explanation |
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DOCUMENT(); loadMacros( "PGstandard.pl", "parserRadioButtons.pl", ); |
Initialization: Include |
$mc = RadioButtons( [ "Blue", "Red", "Green", "None of the above" ], "Blue" ); |
Setup: We create a radio button object with
To create a drop-down ("pop-up") option (having loaded $mc = PopUp( [ "?", "Blue", "Red", "Green", "None of the above" ], "Blue" ); Note that in this case we should specify a generic non-answer as the first option, so that when the selector is displayed it does not automatically give the student an answer (which may or may not be correct). |
BEGIN_TEXT What color most resembles the sky? $BR \{ $mc->buttons() \} END_TEXT |
Main text: In the text section we print the question and radio buttons giving the answers. For a PopUp object, the call to create the menu of options is |
$showPartialCorrectAnswers = 0; ANS( $mc->cmp() ); ENDDOCUMENT(); |
Answer Evaluation: In most cases we will want to set |