Design for chronology, causation, and sources
Third period, Grade 9 Cold War wrap‑up: you need ten minutes to see who can place events and explain why they occurred. A history‑ready generator should not default to trivia. It should build items that check historical thinking. Specify the mix up front and anchor it to a real source so distractors mirror actual confusions (Yalta vs. Potsdam; 1945 vs. 1947; NATO vs. Warsaw Pact). In ClassPods, you can upload a PDF or paste a URL and ask for a balanced set such as:
- Chronology: sequence three events or choose the earliest/ latest with tight dates.
- Cause and consequence: stems that require “led to,” “because,” or “therefore.”
- Significance: why an event mattered in that context, not in general.
- Source analysis: primary vs. secondary, purpose/audience, or bias cues.
Keep stems concise for live play and avoid trick wording. Ask for 12–18 words per stem for Grades 7–9; 18–25 for Grades 10–11. Tell the tool to keep names consistent and to include both forms where common (e.g., Saladin/Salah al‑Din). To see how source‑first prompting changes quality, open the quiz generator and run one draft with a topic only, then one with a paragraph and question mix: open the quiz generator.