Creating a quiz in just a few mouse clicks.
We want you to enjoy your experience using Math Quiz Creator. If you have any problems, questions or suggestions about how to improve Math Quiz Creator, please don't hesitate to contact us at: Support@MathQuizCreator.com.

We will try our best to respond to your question within 24 hours. Even if you haven't purchased yet, but you have a question about the trial version, we still want to hear from you.

Your questions and suggestions are the best tool available to help us to make Math Quiz Creator better, and we want to hear from you.

Online Helpfile

The complete helpfile for Math Quiz Creator is available online by clicking here.

Feel free to browse the manual to see how Math Quiz Creator can help you increase your students' understanding of arithmetic.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. I've added some addition problems to my quiz. Now I want to add some multiplication problems. How do I do that?
  2. Click the 'Add Questions' button again, and you'll be walked through the wizard again. This time, choose 'Multiplication' as your problem type. You can repeat this process as many times as you want.

  3. Whenever I exit the program, there's a long delay before the 'Buy Later' button is enabled. Why is this?
  4. This is part of the trial version of the program. Both the delay and the reminder window go away with the registered version of the program.

  5. How do the options work for multiplication questions?
  6. For multiplication problems, you're choosing what values are possible for the two terms to be multiplied. The larger checkboxes determine the possible values for the first term. The three small checkboxes beneath each of those terms determine which ranges of possible values might appear as the second term. For example, if the only large checkbox that's checked is a '4', then the first term of the multiplication problem will definitely be a '4'. If the only small checkbox below the '4' that's checked is '5-8', then the problems that are generated will be between '4 x 5' and '4 x 8'. This lets you introduce easier problems (1-4 type) when you first start quizzing your students, and you can eliminate those easy problems and focus on the harder ones (9-12 type) later in your course of study.

    Multiplication options