Design for geographic skills, not country trivia
In a Grade 6 map-skills block, the worksheet should target actions: use a compass rose, measure distance with a scale, read simple contour lines, and locate coordinates. Build that into the task mix. For multiple-choice, show a short stem about a choropleth and ask which region has the highest population density given the legend. For fill-in-the-blank, use core terms (latitude, longitude, delta, estuary). For short-answer, ask students to explain a route using cardinal and intercardinal directions, or to justify why Site B is better for a settlement based on relief and water access.
Avoid pure recall (“capital of…”) unless you’re checking prerequisites. Insist on units for distance, include a north arrow reference, and keep map snippets uncluttered if you attach them. If you’re drafting inside ClassPods, you can open the worksheet generator and specify: 3 MCQs on scale/legend reading, 2 fill-ins on key terms, and 2 short explanations tied to a small map or table you provide. The more the questions depend on that material, the less they drift into trivia.