Kahoot
Kahoot! (kahoot.com) is the name that often comes to mind when you think of game show-style review game. In a standard Kahoot! game, questions are displayed to students on a projector or display. Students respond on their own devices.
Microsoft Flip
Flip (flip.com ... formerly Flipgrid) is a social learning platform that allows educators to pose a question or a prompt, then the students respond in a video. Flip understands the power of community and educators connecting and becoming better together.
Quizlet
Instead of students answering individual questions on their individual devices, Quizlet (quizlet.com) puts students in groups. All possible answers are divided amongst the devices of all students participating.
Quizizz
Quizizz (quisiss.com) can be used as a simple multiple choice review game. It's student-paced, meaning that students answer questions on their own screen and only advance after they've answered a question personally. But it's much more than that! Quizizz has leveled up the game experience with fun power-ups and lots of response types (draw, match, poll, video, audio)
Pear Deck
Pear Deck (peardeck.com) is a way to turn your presentation slides into interactive activities for your students. (It's similar to Nearpod below.) Create slides in PowerPoint or Google Slides for Pear Deck -- or import slides you already have. Add interactive features like multiple-choice questions, drag and drop questions, drawing questions, and more. Engage your students with these questions on their own devices during instruction.
Nearpod
Nearpod (nearpod.com) uses interactive lessons, interactive videos, gamified learning, formative assessments and activities in a slide deck-style presentation. (It's similar to Pear Deck above.) Upload from PowerPoint, Google Slides, PDFs, videos and more ... or create new slides just for Nearpod. Add a variety of question and media types to your lesson. Then go through the lesson live with your class or let students complete it asynchronously on their own.
Edpuzzle
Edpuzzle (edpuzzle.com) is an easy-to-use platform allowing you to insert questions into engaging videos for your students. Students watch the videos and are prompted to answer the questions. Edpuzzle gathers data so that you can see what your students learned and differentiate instruction.
Hyperdocs
HyperDocs are purposefully designed digital lessons and can transform your class. They truly are so much more than a doc with links. The creators of HyperDocs — Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah Landis — describe them as a transformative, interactive Google Doc replacing the worksheet method of delivering instruction, the ultimate change agent in the blended learning classroom.
Gimket (gimkit.com) is a game-based tech tool where students answer questions on their own device at their own pace. Throughout a Kit, each student gets exposure to questions multiple times to ensure mastery.
Click on the link above to learn more about using Google Jamboard as an instructional tool in your classroom.
Click on the link above to access a TON! of ideas and resources to add more game play to your classroom culture.
Blooket (blooket.com) is a trivia and review game game site. Teachers pick question sets and set the game mode. Students play by answering questions and engaging in collective game play!