What an Arabic geography quiz must check, not just recall
Start from a real classroom moment: a Grade 6 mapping lesson where students practiced reading latitude (دوائر العرض) and longitude (خطوط الطول) and estimating distances from a scale bar. A strong Arabic geography quiz should target those skills directly. That means items where students identify the hemisphere of a coordinate pair, choose the nearest whole-number distance using the given scale, or label landforms (سهل، هضبة، جبال) from a brief description. For human geography, prioritize applied reading: population density comparisons, settlement patterns along rivers, or reasons a city is a transport hub.
Before generating, write a tight source summary in Arabic: three to five sentences naming the place, the scale used (مثلاً 1:50,000)، the variables on the graph, and key vocabulary students encountered. Ask for short stems (1–2 lines), one-step calculations, and plausible distractors that reflect typical errors (confusing شرق with غرب, misreading the scale). Avoid items that can be answered without the map context. To test the difference quickly, open the quiz builder and draft from your summary rather than a broad topic prompt by using the in-app demo.