I love this! I can see how this will help us build formatives as well as build our own formatives within a formative. It makes me think of a hyperdoc in a way. Thank you so much!
This is really awesome Michael! As you mentioned, I’ve never actually seen anyone do something like this before and I can see it being a great way to help educators explore with Formative. Specifically, I could see this being a great self-paced tutorial for people who want to tinker before creating their own formatives!
Hey @michael.lutz! Thank you so much for sharing this amazing formative with us. I love how detailed and thorough it is. I shared it on our Facebook page today too. Be sure to visit the page, like, and share the post! Thanks again for sharing too
Thank you very much Michael! it’s a very useful formative!!! What kind of googledocs, etc. did you embedd? It’s also possible post for each pupil a separate doc?it looks to me, that the embedded googledocs are to small…
Would it be possible to put a question on a google docs, or is it only possible to create questions on pdf/word/…?
Keep on rocking!
P.S.: Der neue StarWars ist Hammer!!! War gestern mit Gabor dort:-)
It isn’t possible to embed different Google Docs for different students. However, you could make the iframe bigger when changing the values of height=“500px” and width=“700px” to a higher number (depending on your students’ device).
@florianmaechler@michael.lutz If you’d like students to be able to access different Google Docs, you could create a centralized one which has links to other pages that are just for individual students. You could then embed it into Formative and students can click on the pages relevant to them! I could see this being useful if you want to provide different learning resources to different students as they respond to a formative and engage in a class activity.
You can also control who has access to specific docs that you’ve linked. For example, I’ve restricted access to Alexa’s link so you can’t see it when you click on it.