I still run Kahoot! on Thursdays, but this is what I use the rest of the week

Sunday evening is my planning window. I’ve got my Year 6 science notebooks open, a half-drunk karak on the desk, and the familiar decision in front of me: do I build another Kahoot! for the conduction/convection recap, or try the thing that saved me last term when half my class was reading more comfortably in Arabic? I’ve used Kahoot! since 2018. The kids know the music, they tease each other about the podium, and if I promise a game on Thursday, behavior spikes up all week.

The tradeoff has always been what happens after the leaderboard. I’d run the quiz, then rebuild the same content as homework, plus a separate version for my Arabic-first students. Double prep, and I still wasn’t catching the quiet misunderstandings. Last term I added ClassPods to the mix because a colleague in Abu Dhabi said the live quiz and the homework could live in one place, and the bilingual part didn’t feel like a bolt-on. This isn’t me dumping Kahoot!; it’s me being honest about the jobs each tool does for my classes.

What follows is how I actually use both, where Kahoot! still makes my room buzz, and where the switch paid me back in saved time and fewer missed concepts.

Why I still reach for Kahoot! on a Thursday last period

Week 7, Thursday, last period, my Year 5 science group was humming after a lab on series vs. parallel circuits. I’d promised a Kahoot!, and the second the lobby music kicked in, attention snapped to the board. That whole-class, one-screen energy is real. For Grades 3–6, especially when I want quick recall with pictures, Kahoot! lands. Ten questions, four choices, and I can build it fast enough between duty and dismissal. Parents know the name, kids ask for it by name, and the podium moment turns even my sleepy table into competitors.

If I’m honest, I still use it because it’s predictable. The pacing is tight, the timer keeps me from talking too long, and the post-game cheer is a nice bow on a heavy day. The limits show up after the bell. There isn’t a natural path for the same questions to become homework, and I end up copying them into something else. That’s when I started testing the follow-up in ClassPods instead of rebuilding it in Forms, and for my older kids it made the difference between a fun moment and a week-long loop.

One flow: live quiz, then the homework, without rebuilding

Last Wednesday my Year 8 English group tripped over independent vs. dependent clauses. I ran a short live set to see who was guessing and who actually knew it, then sent the same questions as homework in two clicks. No exporting, no new link to create, and because students don’t need accounts, the homework just shows up as a personal link. The absent student got it the next morning, and I could see which clause type each kid missed without touching a spreadsheet.

This is the place where the workflow feels different. I’m not juggling a live-game tool plus a separate assignment tool. The set I write once becomes a live check, a homework loop, and a make-up for the kid who was at the dentist. I also like the teacher view during the live round; it shows me who’s stuck so I can pause and reteach before the wrong pattern sets in. If you want to see the live-to-homework handoff, you can spin up a draft in the builder and try it with a small group.

Bilingual EN/AR that doesn’t make half the class wait

First week of Term 2, Year 6 social studies, three students told me quietly they’d rather read in Arabic for the assessment. With Kahoot!, I’d been making two versions or leaning on a translate toggle that slowed them down. In ClassPods, bilingual English/Arabic is baked in. Students choose their interface language, the UI flips right-to-left properly, and the questions appear in the language they picked without me running two separate sessions. The pace of the table stays the same, and the Arabic readers aren’t stuck two steps behind.

I stopped spending Sunday night rewriting every prompt. I still proof and tweak word choice — that’s teaching — but the base text respects MSA grammar and doesn’t make me the bottleneck. That subtle dignity matters. My Arabic readers started sitting wherever they wanted because they weren’t reliant on me to translate the slide. If you want to see what other teachers in the region are sharing for mixed-medium classes, the community area is easy to browse here.

Choosing by fit: ages, price, and what your week looks like

In Week 10 our department actually pulled up numbers. For our Grade 3–6 English-only groups, Kahoot! stays on the plan because the gameshow vibe gets them through a tough afternoon. For bilingual classes or anything past Grade 7, the pile of small wins — live plus homework in one place, no student accounts, easier make-ups — nudges me to ClassPods. I’d rather cut one recurring rebuild task than chase the exact same podium effect with older kids who don’t care about it.

On cost, both tools have free paths for a single teacher. The school question is different. If you’re buying department-wide, it makes sense to pay for the platform that handles the live moment and the assignment loop together. We ended up phasing ours by subject rather than flipping a switch all at once. If you’re weighing it for your building, the actual numbers are on the pricing page, and you can run a term with both before you ask finance to consolidate.

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