If I'm given a map from $\mathbb{C}P^1\times\mathbb{C}P^1$ to $\mathbb{C}P^3$ which sends $([z_{0},z_{1}],[w_{0},w_{1}])$ to $[z_{0}w_{0},z_{0}w_{1},z_{1}w_{0},z_{1}w_{1}]$, how do I compute the induced map on the second homology group $H_{2}$?
So far I've tried to find a homotopy of this map to a cellular map so I can compute the induced map using cellular homology. I think there is a homotopy taking the map $[z_{0}w_{0},z_{0}w_{1},z_{1}w_{0},z_{1}w_{1}]$ to the map $[z_{0}w_{0},z_{0}w_{1}+z_{1}w_{0},z_{1}w_{1},0]$, but I'm still having trouble computing the induced map on homology from here. I think that each copy of $\mathbb{C}P^1$ can be viewed as $([z_{0},z_{1}],[1,0])$ and $([1,0],[w_{0},w_{1}])$ which would mean the two generators of $H_{2}(\mathbb{C}P^1\times\mathbb{C}P^1)$ are sent to $[z_{0},z_{1},0,0]$ and $[w_{0},w_{1},0,0]$. Does this mean the induced map would send $(1,0), (0,1)\in\mathbb{Z}\times\mathbb{Z}$ to $1\in\mathbb{Z}$?