Why I still run Gimkit on Thursdays
Last Thursday, my Grade 6 science group wrapped up “ecosystems” with a live round. Gimkit’s pace, the team modes, the power-ups — my kids light up. It’s the closest thing I have to a reliable spark at 1:20 p.m. after lunch. Parents also recognize the name, which smooths over the “what are they doing online in class” question. And for straight recall — ten multiple-choice questions, a couple of images — I can get from idea to playable in ten minutes. That speed matters when I’m printing hall passes and answering three emails at once.
Where I start to feel the pinch is the morning after. The live game ends, and I’m back in Google Docs building the homework version. The absent student needs a make-up. The kid who rode a teammate’s answers needs another shot alone. That’s where I tested ClassPods — same kind of live round, but I can push the exact draft as homework and track who struggled with which item. If you’re curious about the assignment side I’m talking about, you can spin up a free account and see it in practice.