By now, almost every educator on the planet has wandered over to getkahoot.com to see what all the fuss is about. If you are one of the lone few who has yet to give Kahoot! a try, pencil it into your lesson plan for tomorrow! Trust me, your students will thank you. Kahoot! is an extremely simple, yet very rewarding game that teachers can create to maximize student learning! For those of you that have used Kahoot before you know the joy that comes across a student's face when the fun, bubbly, Kahoot! music starts. Kahoot! is a great tool to use when you want to assess knowledge levels and have some fun at the same time. Did you know Kahoot! can do way more than assess your students? Yep, Kahoot! has developed many ways in which you can use their platform in the same simple, yet fun fashion. JumbleJumble is Kahoot!'s newest addition. Jumble works the same way the original Kahoot! Quiz works, except instead of choosing one answer choice as the correct option, students must put all answer choices in a sequential or chronological order. Teachers can create their own Jumble and watch the higher order thinking skills begin! Jumble still focuses attention to the front of the room by displaying the question and answer choices. The students' job is to shuffle the colored blocks on their device into what they believe is the correct order based on the choices seen at the front of the room. Ways to use Jumble:
Tip: To save on time, have students in pre-determined teams and have one device out and ready for each team. Have students play in team mode (see below), to help organize their answers together. This is an easy and fun way to wrap up class and test knowledge! PodiumNext time you create a Kahoot! Quiz or a Jumble, make sure to toggle on Kahoot! Experiments and Podium! When Podium is toggled on for your game, the top three scorers will get to see their name at the end of the game! We all know how competitive a Kahoot! game can get, so why not let more students experience the feeling of winning a Kahoot! To turn on experiments and Podium, open an existing Kahoot! or create a new one, select game options, and toggle on Kahoot! Experiments and Podium. Team ModeKahoot! is all about teamwork! Instead of having students play in individual devices, place students into teams, with one device per team. One student enters the pin number for the Kahoot! and then players can enter individual nicknames. Now students must work together, discuss thoughts, and collaborate on an answer. This lends to differentiated learning through collaboration, and concept awareness. Higher level students will be able to navigate through questions and explain their answers. Lower level students will become more aware of the concept and connect the question and correct answer. Not to mention, team mode is a time saver! Ghost ModeRepetition at its finest! There have been quite a few Kahoot! games my students have played that ended in a demand to play again. What?! My students wanted to play the same game, with the same concepts, same answers, with an increased opportunity for the concept to stick in their minds?! Score! This is where ghost mode comes in. When a Kahoot! is finished, the option to play the game again in Ghost Mode will appear. The Kahoot! will still be live, but student names will appear twice, one with a ghost symbol beside their name. As students play the Kahoot! their goal is to beat their previous score. Each time they play the Kahoot!, they should score higher than the last, until mastered. Blind Kahoot!ingThe purpose of a blind Kahoot! is to introduce completely new concepts that students have not been taught. So, instead of using the Kahoot! Quiz as a review game or assessment, it is made to build knowledge through each question. You create a Blind Kahoot! the same way you create a Kahoot! Quiz, except your questioning should be different. Since you are building new knowledge your questions must be set up like building blocks in order for students to gain new information. To find out more about how to question and set up a Blind Kahoot!, read the Art of Blind Kahoot!'ing. Discussions and SurveysDont' forget about Kahoot!'s awesome option to create a discussion or survey. A survey can be set up to find out what knowledge students already have on a topic, or to poll the students. Surveys are taken without the competition. There are no points awarded to players, and no right or wrong answers. Kahoot! Surveys are great for gathering student opinion! Discussions can be used to help facilitate classroom communication on a specific topic. When you create a Kahoot! Discussion, you can only assign one question. This way you can push the Discussion to your students quickly, receive feedback, and begin a realtime discussion in your classroom. Kahoot! ResultsDid you know that each Kahoot! your class plays is saved under your results?! You can access the results right after a Kahoot! is finished, days later, or even years later. To find My Results, you would click on your username in the Kahoot! toolbar, then click on My Results. Each Kahoot! that has been played will be shown on the screen, similar to above. The Download button opens the results in an Excel spreadsheet with multiple pages breaking down each statistic and question for you. One of my favorite things to do as a classroom teacher was to open the results and see which questions were missed the most. I would re-teach those concepts, then replay the Kahoot! at a later date. Many times, we would repeat this process until all students mastered the questions AND the concepts. Clicking the Save button will automatically save your results to your Google Drive. It even allows you to choose which folder you would like the results to be sent. I always created a Kahoot! Results folder at the beginning of the year, so anything Kahoot! related could be saved.
The Ghost Mode Play Again option allows your students to play against a previous score at anytime during the year. If my students played a Kahoot! after a lesson was taught, we may play the same Kahoot! again in Ghost Mode two weeks later as a test review. Students should still remember the concepts, and should score higher since all material has been taught. The Share Link button enables you to copy the link to the played Kahoot! and send it to students, other classes, or other teachers. Those classes can then play in Ghost Mode and try to beat your scores! Share the link with a neighboring district and challenge them to beat your scores, or vice versa!
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