Draw / Sketch Questions
A draw question asks you to answer by sketching on a canvas — a diagram, circuit, or graph drawn freehand rather than selected or typed.
How to approach it
Decide the key elements your sketch must show, label them clearly, and keep it neat. The grader is usually looking for correct components and relationships, not artistic quality.
Example
Draw a simple circuit with a battery, a switch, and a bulb in series.
Common variants
- Free-body / physics sketch
- Circuit or schematic
- Concept diagram
Where you'll see it
- Wayground
- Interactive whiteboards
How AI Solve Quiz helps with draw questions
AI Solve Quiz explains what a correct sketch should contain and how the parts relate, so you can draw it yourself.
AI Solve Quiz is a study and explanation tool for practice and learning. It must not be used during graded assessments or proctored exams — see our Academic Integrity Policy.
Frequently asked questions
How is a drawn answer graded? ▼
Usually by a human against a checklist of required elements; some tools auto-grade structured drawings like graphs or circuits.
Related question types
Short Answer A short answer question asks for a brief written response — usually one to three sentences. Unlike fill-in-the-blank, there is more than one acceptable wording, so it is graded by rubric or by automated short-answer scoring. Multiple Choice A multiple choice question presents a stem (the question) and a fixed list of options, exactly one of which is correct. The wrong options are called distractors and are written to look plausible. Multiple Response A multiple response question has two or more correct options and asks you to select every one of them. Because partial credit is common, each checkbox is effectively its own true/false decision. True/False A true/false question gives one statement and asks you to judge whether it is correct. Yes/no and agree/disagree items are the same binary format.