ZipWits
Think Linking

4 • Toric Stories

introducing interactive quiz stories organized by a map that rolls into a torus

Goals

For the learner to have an opportunity to . . .

  • Examine a variety of interactive quizzes based on a toric map
  • Recognize the elements of hypertext constructed with paper
  • Assess toric interactive quizzes as portfolio products
  • Evaluate options for higher thinking skills (e.g., group work)
  • Compare toric map quizzes with the iQuiz format

Content

These two interactive quizzes were written by 11-year-olds.
These two interactive quizzes were written by 9-year-olds.
  • Click or tap on any of the images to examine the content.
  • All four were constructed from a map that forms a torus (donut shape) if rolled side to side, then end to end.
All four are functionally similar.
  • Given a passage on each sheet and three options [bottom left], select the option that you think fits best and turn to the sheet named after the arrow.
  • Sheets are arbitrarily named, and students would often pick a theme of their choice, such as colors or countries.
Content is not arbitrary; students organize rows by thematic elements.
  • For instance, the map for Jimmy’s math maze shows that each row across corresponds to the same operation: addition, subtraction, multiplication, adding decimals, adding common fractions.
  • Similarly, the map for Kristina’s quiz shows each row is thematically linked: food, clothing, ceremony, relationships, symbols or artifacts.
Integrating story with math made the content more meaningful and raised the taxonomic level to application of the math concept and creation of the narrative.
  • Students at both levels demonstrated enthusiasm for topic quizzes, possibly by a heightened by ownership in the process, integrating interactivity with subject matter. People support what they help create. A math maze requires making a map, creating narrative, organizing flow of content, adding graphics, and peer proofreading. The result is a portfolio product that showcases skills in any or all of these areas.
  • The 11-year-olds worked to a stated rubric, evident on the cover sheets of their quizzes. They also were required to explain the answer on the back of the question sheet.
What do you Think?
  1. When students worked in small groups, three students producing one interactive quiz, the quality of the product and the taxonomic levels attempted increased. What might account for that?
  2. As portfolio products, students were not penalized in areas outside the primary subject area. For instance, quality of artwork would not lower a social studies score. How is a portfolio product like or unlike showing that I can ride a bicycle?
Content
Content

About Me

Roger Kenyon was North America’s first lay canon lawyer and associate director at the Archdiocese of Seattle. He was involved in tech (author of Macintosh Introductory Programming, Mainstay) before teaching (author of ThinkLink: a learner-active program, Riverwood). Roger lives near Toronto and is the author of numerous collections of short stories.

“When not writing, I’m riding—eBike, motorbike, and a mow cart that catches air down the hills. One day I’ll have Goldies again.”