Very often, I share on my Twitter feed (@blogdecristina) bits and pieces of what I do with my students during the week. There’s nothing aspirational about these tweets. It’s just a few words about a little tool I have tried, a photograph of a moment in my class, an attempt at pairing students in a different way. I don’t write a post about them because they are really low effort, but they work.
Having a look at my tweets has also led me to realize that there are some tools I use fairly often and never mention here, such as this tool: Flippity.
I won’t claim to know all the edtools out there, but I know and work with lots, and my gut feeling is that although there are some good randomizers, not many compare to Flippity when it comes to forming random pairs or groups. And for free.
So, what’s Flippity?
In most games, Flippity uses Google sheets, so it goes without saying you have to have a Google account. Then, easy, you choose the game and follow the instructions to turn a Google sheet into flipcard, a quiz show, a randomizer, a board game or a bingo to name just a few of the resources it can create.
Today, I want to share with you one of the many ways to work with Flippity; in this case, forming groups in the class. Because aren’t you tired of students always sitting next to the same partner? So, let’s pair them up or let’s group students in a different way in our next class. Surprise your students by working the magic of Flipitty. How?
- Go to Flippity ( hahaha, obviously) and choose Random Name Picker.
- Click on Instructions
- Write or Copy/Paste the list of students
- Click on Generate
- Done!. Choose from the top what you want to do with the list: pair them up or perhaps create groups of 4 students?
And just because I love making videos, here’s one about how to do it from scratch
🙂 yes, this has also happened to me and for different reasons.
Thanks for your comment!
Not only may the teacher be willing to witness a change of “pair of students” but the students themselves have asked in private if they could possibly not be paired with X or Z as it happened in my class not long ago involving ADHD So, definitely, I will be trying out this tool for more inclusive classrooms, Cristina! Thanks for sharing