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All About Alice Interactive Mathematics Program Answers

AIM documentation

  • List of courses and web sites using AIM
  • Try typical examples of AIM questions. More examples ...
  • Student's comments and reactions about AIM.
  • Paper: Using Maple and the Web to grade mathematics tests [PS format  - 300K or PDF format - 3.5megs], published in IWALT2000 conference.
  • Detailed description of question format (for teacher).
  • Help for students that are using AIM.
  • About the Alice Project
  • New! AIM email discussion list for teachers using AIM.
  • Installation instructions for the old version "aim-plain1" (Maple 5 and 6, Windows 95, 98 and NT, Unix/Linux) :
    • under windows
    • under unix / linux
  • Installation instructions for the new version "aim-plain 2.12" (Maple 7 and 8, Windows 98 and NT, Unix/Linux):
    • under windows
    • under unix/linux


  • AIM is a web-based system designed to administer graded tests with mathematical content.
    Its main features are:
    • The use of Maple as the engine for test delivery. This makes it easy to design, display and automatically grade questions with randomisation. A typical example is a question which asks the student to compute a symbolic integral of a randomly chosen product of trigs and exp, then verifies whether their answer is correct through differentiation.
    • One can easily include mathematical formulas and Maple graphics generated on the fly.
    • Implementation of several automatic methods of giving partial credits, feedback and penalties for wrong answers. These include:
      • Hints and subquestions that, if the student decides to views them, generate a penalty.
      • Multiple response questions.
      • Penalties based on the number of wrong trials.
      • Custom grading procedures that can make use of any Maple's functionality.
    • Predefined question types include algebraic, matrix, constant, multiple response, multiple choice, string. In addition any Maple type can also be used.
    • Grade reporting and monitoring capabilities, including the ability to collect surveys electronically.


    Some potential benefits of using AIM:

    • Reduced workload for teaching assistants by automating the process of grading the homework. Each homework is graded by a computer which also generates a grade report for the whole class.
    • Students get immediate feedback: they don't have to wait weeks until their homework is graded to know if they made a mistake. They can correct their mistakes and if they don't know how to proceed, they can view hints.
    • The penalty system encourages students to double-check their answers before giving them to the computer.
    • Homeworks are customized for each student to prevent cheating. The teacher need only specify a question topic and difficulty level; the system then chooses at random a question of that type from a list of available questions.
    • The system uses the Web, and thus all its advantages (such as graphics, java applets etc) can be incorporated into quizzes.
    • Administration (modifying questions, getting grade reports, etc) is done through the web-based interface. Thus anyone with the teacher's password can modify quizzes, from any computer connected to the web, without the need to install any additional software.
    • The system encourages feedback from the students. This is done through email as well as through customizable evaluation surveys.

    All About Alice Interactive Mathematics Program Answers

    Source: https://users.ugent.be/~nvdbergh/aim_rug/docs/

    Posted by: burkswhispectilly.blogspot.com

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