Quizizz is a game-show-style quiz tool similar to Kahoot!, Quizalize, and Quizlet. It has both a web-based version as well as an iOS app for students and Chrome apps for teachers and students. Students access quizzes on their devices or computer using an access code, and they can see both questions and answers on their screens. There's a searchable database of hundreds of quizzes, and teachers can use those or edit them to meet their needs. When creating their own quizzes, teachers can add images as well as customize the feedback students see after each question on the quiz. Feedback comes in the form of memes, which display based on right or wrong answers.
Students can take the quizzes competitively at the same time in class (and see classmates' progress), or teachers can assign the quiz as homework and have students complete it on their own time.
Game-like student-response tool can spark competitive fun.
Kahoot, a free student-response tool for all platforms, allows teachers to run game-like multiple-choice answer quizzes in real time. Teachers (as well as students) can either create their own quizzes or find, use, and/or remix public quizzes. Questions, along with answer choices, are projected onto a classroom screen while students submit responses using a personal (likely mobile) device. Questions and polls can contain images and video to help further appeal to all learners. Students' devices display color and symbol choices only; the actual answers must be viewed on the classroom screen.
Quizalize is a classroom quiz-game website similar to Kahoot!, Quizlet, and Quizizz. Create quizzes with multiple- or two-choice question sets or single-word responses presented as word scrambles. Students then access the quiz from the Web using a class code and see the full quiz on their screen. Teachers see how each student is progressing to the score goal, and they can choose to display this progress to the class. Premade quizzes are available -- some for free, and some at a cost -- and teachers can share the quizzes they create, too, for free or for a price.
After the quiz, students see their score, how long it took them to answer each question, and a list of all questions, their answers, and correct answers. Teachers see a quick list of which students were strong and which need help.
All information about these tools come from Common Sense Media.