Difference between revisions of "SubjectAreaTemplates"

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This page has complete examples of problem techniques organized by subject area. Within each subject, we give an explicit and brief description of the essential characteristics of each type of question. To keep overlap to a minimum, we try to give an example of each problem technique exactly once, which means you may need to look for a particular problem technique under other subject headings until you find it. We try to give a fairly complete list of techniques, rather than a complete list of types of questions that one might ask in each subject. All of these questions exist in <code>NationalProblemLibrary/FortLewis/Authoring/Templates/</code> A detailed list of code snippets for specific problem techniques has it's own category: [[IndexOfProblemTechniques|index of problem techniques]].
 
This page has complete examples of problem techniques organized by subject area. Within each subject, we give an explicit and brief description of the essential characteristics of each type of question. To keep overlap to a minimum, we try to give an example of each problem technique exactly once, which means you may need to look for a particular problem technique under other subject headings until you find it. We try to give a fairly complete list of techniques, rather than a complete list of types of questions that one might ask in each subject. All of these questions exist in <code>NationalProblemLibrary/FortLewis/Authoring/Templates/</code> A detailed list of code snippets for specific problem techniques has it's own category: [[IndexOfProblemTechniques|index of problem techniques]].
 
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=== Miscellaneous ===
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* [[MultipleChoice1|Multiple choice question 1]] Only one correct answer
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* [[MultipleChoice2|Multiple choice question 2]] Possibly more than one correct answer
   
 
=== Algebra ===
 
=== Algebra ===

Revision as of 19:13, 30 November 2010

Any additions to the problems below should use the format of the full problem template. Also, your example should illustrate the technique without giving away the answer to an existing WeBWorK question.

Index of Problem Authoring Techniques for WeBWorK by Subject Area

This page has complete examples of problem techniques organized by subject area. Within each subject, we give an explicit and brief description of the essential characteristics of each type of question. To keep overlap to a minimum, we try to give an example of each problem technique exactly once, which means you may need to look for a particular problem technique under other subject headings until you find it. We try to give a fairly complete list of techniques, rather than a complete list of types of questions that one might ask in each subject. All of these questions exist in NationalProblemLibrary/FortLewis/Authoring/Templates/ A detailed list of code snippets for specific problem techniques has it's own category: index of problem techniques.

Miscellaneous

Algebra

Trigonometry

Precalculus

Differential Calculus

Integral Calculus

Vector Calculus

Differential Equations