What an Arabic homework generator must handle
Thursday, Grade 5 Arabic. You just finished a short fable and a mini-lesson on جمع التكسير and agreement. The generator you use should reflect that exact mix. For Arabic, “make a worksheet” is not enough; it must respect Modern Standard Arabic, allow short stems that read naturally, and support items that check morphology and spelling without turning into trick questions. A practical set often includes a 90–130 word passage, two comprehension items (one literal, one inference), vocabulary (مرادف/مضاد) tied to the passage, targeted نحو (e.g., مبتدأ/خبر identification), a morphology check (جمع/مثنى), and one brief writing prompt (٣–٤ جمل).
When you draft inside ClassPods, ask for multiple valid answers where appropriate (e.g., “المعلمين/المعلّمين”), and keep distractors plausible but teachable—no dialect words or near-duplicates. To see how this lands on the page, open the homework generator and feed it the paragraph you taught rather than a loose topic; anchoring to real text prevents generic items and keeps vocabulary consistent. You can open the generator here and start with yesterday’s class note or slide text.