What a bilingual LA quiz must handle beyond translation
Monday’s Grade 6 reading block starts with a 180‑word passage and a quick comprehension check. For Language Arts, the quiz must do more than swap words into Arabic: it has to keep the author’s purpose, tone, figurative language, and evidence expectations intact. Ask for side‑by‑side stems and options so students never chase meanings across tabs. Require line or sentence references when items call for text evidence. For vocabulary‑in‑context, insist the Arabic option matches sense, not root—especially with false friends (e.g., "actual" vs. "فعلي" not "حقيقي" in some contexts). For idioms, ask for an equivalent expression or a plain‑language paraphrase, not a literal rendering.
Reading load matters. Specify short stems (under 18 words) for Grades 3–5, and allow slightly longer for Grades 6–8. Keep distractors plausible but distinct—no pairs that differ by one preposition. For ELLs, plan to switch on read‑aloud for stems and answer choices so decoding doesn’t mask comprehension. The fastest way to pressure‑test these constraints is to open the quiz builder and generate a small set from your current passage using explicit instructions; you can try the in‑app demo and see how side‑by‑side output changes review speed immediately.