Learn more about: Water Line | Tile Pile
Water Line
Water Line has been officially retired and is no longer available from teacher.desmos.com or student.desmos.com. This means that Teacher dashboards for this activity will no longer be accessible and students can no longer join or revisit Water Line lessons. All session codes for Water Line have expired.
Why?
Water Line was one of the first activities built by Desmos Classroom. It was the inspiration for a number of features in Desmos Classroom, including Challenge Creators that now feature prominently in a number of activities.
Over the years as our activities and technology evolved, we’ve developed new tools for orchestrating classroom discussions, for securing classes and student data, and for designing for accessibility. Water Line hasn’t benefited from these improvements, so we’ve made the hard decision to retire it.
I miss it.
That’s not a question! So do we. If you’d still like to explore the activity, you can find an exact working demo of the student experience in the Desmos Museum. The Class Cupboard will be lonely, but everything will work.
For an alternative activity covering similar mathematical content, check out any of the activities in our Functions collection.
And if you’re looking for a Challenge Creator, inspired by the Class Cupboard, you might want to check out Parabola Slalom or Land the Plane.
Tile Pile
Tile Pile has been officially retired and is no longer available from teacher.desmos.com or student.desmos.com. This means that Teacher dashboards for this activity will no longer be accessible and students can no longer join or revisit Tile Pile lessons. All session codes for Tile Pile have expired.
Why?
Tile Pile was one of the first activities built by Desmos Classroom. It was the result of a collaboration between Desmos and the brilliant folks at Smarter Balanced and Illustrative Mathematics. It was an inspiration for a lot of the design behind the social and creative activities on teacher.desmos.com.
Over the years as our activities and technology evolved, we’ve developed new tools for orchestrating classroom discussions, for securing classes and student data, and for designing for accessibility. Tile Pile hasn’t benefited from these improvements, so we’ve made the hard decision to retire it.
I miss it.
That’s not a question! So do we. If you’d still like to explore the activity, or try to solve the Z-Tile puzzle, you can find an exact working demo of the entire experience in the Desmos Museum.
For an alternative activity covering similar mathematical content, you might want to check out Balloon Float.