
Best of all: You can probably get away with the free version. It's super simple for both you and your audience to use, and can generate great visual aids like word clouds that can be used during, or even after, presentations. We use it regularly to run live polls during our presentations and lectures. Mentimeter is a favorite among the staff at Common Sense. Great for simple polls during presentations: Mentimeter

It's also got the best privacy score of any tool on this list. We're particularly fond of Formative's live feedback feature, and the creative question types.

Compared to other tools on this list, it has less flash and dash, but a better feedback loop between students and teachers. If your focus is on substantive dialogue about learning, then Formative is worth a look. They've also added a post-quiz exit ticket that gets students reflecting on their learning and feelings. For now, it remains for us the go-to option for quick, fun quiz games. While Kahoot's suite of products has gotten increasingly bloated and confusing, the slick presentation of the quiz experience remains unmatched for K-12 classrooms. These study sets have a mastery option that reinforces concepts as well as other neat customization options.Įasily one of the more popular tools on this list, Kahoot! defined the quiz game genre. Students can use study sets that teachers assign, create their own, or use one from the content library powered by providers like Kaplan. If you want to help students prep for tests, there's really nothing better. The standout feature is its flash-card-based study tools. Quizlet is a polished tool that pretty much does it all. Best for flashcards and test prep: Quizlet These tools also got high marks and are worth a look, depending on your needs. This turns Quizizz into a lesson-delivery tool edging closely to platforms like Nearpod. However, the paid version (no ads) takes things to the next level with video and audio embeds, asynchronous learning, and answer explanations. Notably, it's got a decent-enough free version (with ads) that lets you run basic quizzes with exceptional question variety. Quizizz has grown thoughtfully over time to be our definitive top choice, whether you're running quick quiz games or looking to craft and launch deeper slide-based lessons with embedded assessments. They're split up into a few key categories that might be your best bet, depending on your needs. These are the tools we feel best balance everything you'd want in a quizzing tool, while offering high-quality learning opportunities and polished experiences. No matter the focus, we've looked at all the tools out there for quizzing and selected our favorites below. Some lean more into play, allowing teachers to host classroom game shows, while others shift more toward learning, facilitating formative assessments. Because of their utility, there are tons of different apps, websites, and games out there for swiftly creating and delivering everything from quizzes and flash cards to polls and exit tickets. While quizzes might not be the most inventive way to learn, they're still useful for memorizing and recalling facts, assessing knowledge, or getting quick info at the end of a lecture or presentation.

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#Third party quiz professional
