tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7489492900803794139.post7577917456916332022..comments2022-03-31T09:18:06.621-05:00Comments on .@MrSchwen: #codemaths:Programming math practice for studentsmrschwenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16852738457317452044noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7489492900803794139.post-54960268247224597872015-04-24T21:38:39.685-05:002015-04-24T21:38:39.685-05:00Thanks Andrew! I looked into Mathquill and Mathtyp...Thanks Andrew! I looked into Mathquill and Mathtype last year and couldn't figure out how to get them to work with Google Apps scripts. If at some point I convert over to the HTML service app that may help.mrschwenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16852738457317452044noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7489492900803794139.post-88283126207115370582015-04-23T23:03:21.674-05:002015-04-23T23:03:21.674-05:00Neat! This is definitely going onto my "to in...Neat! This is definitely going onto my "to investigate over summer" list -- I especially what you did with the background changing colors as a quick check.<br /><br />Related to your most recent project, have you looked into MathQuill? It's what Desmos uses to transform text into math, and I've been very happy with it.<br /><br />It sounds like you've got a good system going, but if you have a "to explore over summer" list too, I recommend you look into Numbas (https://numbas.mathcentre.ac.uk/). Very similar to your #codemaths, you can set up variables and use various functions to manipulate them, packaged together with a mix of html and javascript to grade, offer feedback, and allow new random questions to be generated.Andrewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04677916682246619842noreply@blogger.com