What an Islamic Studies quiz generator must handle
Period 3, Grade 7 Fiqh: you need five scenario questions on wudū’ breaks, two short seerah sequence items, and one ayah-to-theme match—entirely in Arabic. A useful generator for this subject must do four things: respect Qur’anic and hadith references, keep Arabic stems concise for mixed-ability readers, avoid sectarian drift by following your specified curriculum, and produce distractors that are plausible within Islamic Studies, not generic trivia. For tajwīd checks, specify whether you want full tashkīl or selective marking; for hadith, require the book and a brief fiqh takeaway rather than raw text alone.
Quality also depends on rejecting weak patterns. Do not accept distractors that are obviously harām/halāl opposites when the lesson was about conditions and exceptions. Avoid stems that bundle two claims (“اختياران صحيحان”) unless you intend multiple correct answers. Anchor every item in the material students actually studied: named events in seerah, defined terms in ‘aqīdah, and scenario frames in fiqh. To see how source-based prompts change the result, open the Arabic quiz generator and try one topic both with and without a source paragraph—then compare the specificity of the questions in this drafting screen.