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20 Useful Digital Assessment Tools for Teachers (Formative, Summative, and More)

Knowledge checks, quizzes and tests, peer evals, and more!

Teacher sitting at a desk looking at a laptop. Text reads Best Digital Assessment Tools.

Proper assessment is essential to learning. Teachers plan their lessons and activities around learning objectives, and they need ways to check that students have accomplished those goals. Assessment is more than just quizzes and tests , as any teacher knows, and these days, there are more options than ever. Using digital assessment tools for teachers save you time, engage your audience, and make life a little easier. No matter what type of assessment you need, there’s a tool to help you out. Take a look at some of our favorites.

Digital Formative Assessment Tools for Teachers

Digital summative assessment tools for teachers, more digital assessment tools for teachers.

Teachers use formative assessments more than any other type, checking for understanding throughout the learning process. This allows them to adjust their teaching and learning activities to better meet student needs and find out which students need a little extra assistance. These digital formative assessment tools make it easier than ever to check in throughout any lesson or activity.

Google Forms for Exit Tickets

Goal: i want to find out what my students learned during today’s lesson..

Exit tickets are a fantastic way to find out what students gained from today’s lesson. If you want to replace the sticky note method with a digital version, try Google Forms. They’re so easy to use, and they give you an easy way to access student responses anywhere, anytime.

Goal: I want to have some fun with my assessments.

This free online quiz-game generator is incredibly popular, and for good reason. Teachers show the questions, and students use the completely safe app on their own devices (like Chromebooks or smartphones) to respond. Kids absolutely love these games, making them an excellent way to ramp up classroom engagement. After the game is over, teachers can take a closer look at the results with reports to determine which items kids still need help mastering. Learn how one teacher uses Kahoot! for middle school math assessments here.

Goal: I want to assess reading comprehension.

CommonLit’s huge free library of reading passages comes with built-in quizzes to test for comprehension. Choose your articles by topic, reading level, or type, and assign to students. They can make annotations and use guided reading questions as they tackle the text, then finish up with a reading comprehension quiz and discussion questions.

Goal: I want to hear from my students and watch them share what they’ve learned.

Flip (formerly Flipgrid) is a social media–style video discussion platform great for generating class discussion around topics, videos, or links posted to the class grid. Students can video-record their responses to share with the teacher or class. It’s a great tool for supporting your students to make their thinking visible.

Goal: I want to do a quick check-in during my lesson.

Mentimeter lets you add polls, word clouds, Q&As, and more to presentations and create an interactive experience for students, who can vote on/respond to questions and engage with the presentation in real time. This made our list because there’s so much variety in the types of formative assessments you can give in real time.

Goal: I want to see my students’ thought process and their answer.

Jamboard is a digital whiteboard that is compatible with Google Workspace (formerly G Suite) services. It’s a game changer for emphasizing the process of learning over the product. Math teachers love how students solve and explain their solution. If you don’t use Google, Padlet is our runner-up.

Goal: I want to listen to my students read to assess fluency.

Students read aloud and answer questions on their device (almost any device works). Within 24 hours, you get a running record with scores for accuracy, fluency, and comprehension. A free basic account includes 10 reading assessments per month. ADVERTISEMENT

Goal: I want to include checks for understanding as my students learn.

Edpuzzle is a video editor that allows both teachers and students to add voice-overs, comments, resources, and quizzes to existing or self-created online videos. Best part? All the students’ answers are gathered for you so you can quickly assess.

Goal: I want to put checks for understanding in my slides.

Pear Deck is an interactive presentation and lesson delivery tool. Students use their devices to follow along with the teacher’s slideshow on a classroom screen. Throughout, teachers can pause at points where they’ve added interactive questions and collect real-time data about student understanding.

Goal: I want personalized quizzes for my students.

Quizzes are standards-tagged so you can efficiently track mastery data from every question ever answered. They support official state standards such as Common Core, TEKS, and many more. Plus, you can add hints or explanations so kids learn as they complete the assessments.

Summative assessments are the formal tests and final projects that assess student learning at the end of a unit or course. There are a variety of digital tools that can make summative assessments easier, including our favorites.

Goal: I want to give a quiz or test online.

If you’re looking for tech tools for student assessment that include plenty of options, try this one. You can include multiple-choice, true/false, and short-answer questions. We love how you see students’ results in real time, and you can add explanations if students get an answer wrong. Students can get instant feedback, or you can make the quiz self-paced or lead it yourself. Our favorite feature: Space Race, a group quiz where students “race” to cross the finish line.

Goal: I want grading to take less time.

No matter what grade and subject you teach, grading takes time that we don’t have. Enter Floop. This tool is a cloud-based website where students get annotated feedback from you and their classmates. Using any internet-connected device, students upload images of an assignment to the platform, and you put markers in places where you want feedback. Students are able to see and respond to comments, creating a feedback loop.

Goal: I want to create standards-based assessments more quickly.

Easily create quizzes that students can answer using their mobile devices. This program also includes a bank with 60,000 standards-aligned question items and 300 pre-built assessments.

Goal: I want students to create online portfolios of their work.

Portfolios are a terrific summative assessment tool, allowing teachers, students, and families to look back over a collection of work and gauge progress. Paper portfolios can get lost and are harder to share and grade. Try an online version instead with a program like Seesaw.

Book Creator

Goal: i want a unique form of summative assessment..

This is another type of portfolio assessment. But rather than just collecting work as they go, students use the program to actively create a digital book showing what they’ve learned.

For fun and interactive options, including peer feedback, try these digital assessment tools.

Rubric Maker

Goal: i want rubrics that are easy to create, use, and share..

Rubrics ensure scoring consistency across assessments. They also make self-assessment and peer feedback much easier. This online tool lets you create quality rubrics and easily share them with others.

Digital Escape Room

Goal: i want to gamify my assessments..

Escape rooms foster collaboration and communication when played by students in teams and can be a really fun way to gamify assessment. Students must work together to solve problems or answer questions, then follow the instructions to break the code. These online escape rooms are easy to build using Google Sites or Google Forms, and if you don’t want to create your own, you’ll find plenty of them available for sale on sites like Teachers Pay Teachers .

Goal: I want my students to give each other feedback.

Once you set up your assignment with Peergrade, pick a feedback rubric (or create your own), and select your assignment. Your students take it from there. They submit work, review each others’, and then act on the feedback. Best part? There’s a teacher overview where you can see it all.

Goal: I want to give voice feedback rather than writing.

Use Kaizena for both teacher and peer feedback, and save everyone a lot of time. This assessment tool lets you embed voice feedback directly into Google Docs at points of your choosing. So cool!

Goal: I want to gather feedback about something from my students.

Digital forms can make life a lot simpler. Build a Jotform to gather feedback from students about an activity or experience, or even your own teaching and classroom experiences. The program compiles answers quickly and anonymously (if you prefer) so you can review results in a snap.

Make the most of digital assessment tools for teachers with these Tips and Tools for Making Online Assessments Work .

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Check for understanding throughout a lesson, assign a quiz or test, or use peer feedback with these digital assessment tools for teachers.

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The satisfying assessment platform

Ans is a web-based assessment tool for students and educators. Whether you want to assess students on paper or digitally, you can design, grade, and publish results online. With Ans, you can save time grading so you can get back to teaching as soon as possible.

web based assessment assignment

Collaborative assignment creation

Create exercises together with your colleagues. Build up a question bank over time that allows you to reuse exercises and generate formative and summative assignments easily. Use tags and learning objectives to align exercises with your curriculum objectives.

Effortless exam flexibility & accessibility

Switch between paper-based and digital exams in one click. Allow students to use a built-in calculator, LaTeX, or equation editor during their test. Enable different accessibility options for students with special needs, such as large font, dyslexia, and high contrast modes.

Automated and collaborative grading

Most question types are automatically graded for you. Collaborate with your colleagues to mark any remaining open-ended questions. Assign reviewers to mark assignments per student or question. Effortlessly mark and publish paper-based exams online with our smart QR code system.

Data-driven assignment analysis

Reflect on the quality of your questions and improve your assignments based on data. Compare your reviewing process with your colleagues and gain deeper insight into student activity and performance.

Seamless feedback and student interactions

Publish insights and feedback for your students and interact with them on the platform. Easily adjust all marks on the go when adjusting the grading scheme or question contribution.

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75 digital tools and apps teachers can use to support formative assessment in the classroom

web based assessment assignment

There is no shortage of  formative assessment strategies, techniques, and tools  available to teachers who use formative instructional practice in their classrooms. Here is an extensive list of 75 digital tools, apps, and platforms that can help you and your students use formative assessment to elicit evidence of learning. We didn’t just add any old tool to this list. Here are the criteria we used for those that made the cut:

  • Supports formative instructional strategies and ways to activate learners to be resources for themselves and peers
  • Is free or awful close to it (under $10 per year, where possible)
  • Allows both students and teachers to take the activator role when possible (sometimes teachers need to get things started)

Before you dig into the tools, I encourage you to spend some time thinking about exactly what you want to accomplish with your students.  “How to pick the right digital tool: Start with your learning goal”  by Erin Beard can help you wrap your head around goals and guide you in choosing the best tool for the task.  “27 easy formative assessment strategies for gathering evidence of student learning”  can help you decide what strategies work best for you and your students.

Record audio and video

  • Animoto  Gives students the ability to make a 30-second video of what they learned in a lesson.
  • AudioNote  A combination of a voice recorder and notepad, it captures both audio and notes for student collaboration.
  • Edpuzzle  Helps you use video (your own, or one from Khan Academy, YouTube, and more) to track student understanding.
  • Flip  Lets students use 15-second to 5-minute videos to respond to prompts. Teachers and peers can provide feedback.
  • QuickVoice Recorder  Allows you to record classes, discussions, or audio for projects. Sync your recordings to your computer easily for use in presentations.
  • Vocaroo  Creates audio recordings without the need for software. Embed the recording into slideshows, presentations, or websites.
  • WeVideo  Lets you use video creatively to engage students in learning. Teachers and students alike can make videos.

Create quizzes, polls, and surveys

  • Crowdsignal  Lets you create online polls, quizzes, and questions. Students can use smartphones, tablets, and computers to provide their answers, and information can be culled for reports.
  • Edulastic  Allows you to make standards-aligned assessments and get instant feedback.
  • FreeOnlineSurveys  Helps you create surveys, quizzes, forms, and polls.
  • Gimkit  Lets you write real-time quizzes. And it was designed by a high school student!
  • Google Forms  Part of the Google suite, Google Forms lets you create quizzes, polls, and surveys and see answers in real time.
  • Kahoot!  A game-based classroom response system that lets you create quizzes using internet content.
  • MicroPoll  Helps you create polls, embed them into websites, and analyze responses.
  • Naiku  Lets you write quizzes students can answer using their mobile devices.
  • Poll Everywhere  Lets you create a feedback poll or ask questions and see results in real time. Allows students to respond in various ways. With open-ended questions, you can capture data and spin up tag clouds to aggregate responses.
  • Poll Maker  Offers unique features, like allowing multiple answers to one question.
  • ProProfs  Helps you make quizzes, polls, and surveys.
  • Quia  Lets you create games, quizzes, surveys, and more. Access a database of existing quizzes from other educators.
  • Quizalize  Helps you create quizzes and homework.
  • Quizizz  Guides you through designing quizzes and lets you include students in the quiz-writing process.
  • Quizlet  Lets you make flashcards, tests, quizzes, and study games that are mobile friendly.
  • Quizmaker  Helps you write quizzes quickly and easily.
  • Survey Hero  Designed to build questionnaires and surveys.
  • SurveyMonkey  Helpful for online polls and surveys.
  • SurveyPlanet  Also helpful for online polls and surveys.
  • Zoho Survey  Allows you to make mobile-friendly surveys and see results in real time.

Brainstorm, mind map, and collaborate

  • AnswerGarden  A tool for online brainstorming and collaboration.
  • Coggle  A mind-mapping tool designed to help you understand student thinking.
  • Conceptboard  Software that facilitates team collaboration in a visual format, similar to mind mapping but using visual and text inputs.
  • Dotstorming  A whiteboard app that allows digital sticky notes to be posted and voted on. This tool is best for generating class discussion and brainstorming on different topics and questions.
  • Educreations Whiteboard  A whiteboard app that lets students share what they know.
  • iBrainstorm  Lets students collaborate on projects using a stylus or their finger.
  • Miro  Allows whole-class collaboration in real time.
  • Padlet  Provides a blank canvas for students to create and design collaborative projects.
  • ShowMe Interactive Whiteboard  Another whiteboard tool to check understanding.
  • XMind  Mind-mapping software for use on desktop computers and laptops.
  • Equity Maps  These discussion maps can help you ensure every student has a chance to share their ideas.

Present, engage, and inspire

  • BrainPOP  Lets you use prerecorded videos on countless topics to shape your lesson plan, then use quizzes to see what stuck.
  • Buncee  Helps students and teachers visualize, communicate, and engage with classroom concepts.
  • Five Card Flickr  Uses the tag feature from photos in Flickr to foster visual thinking.
  • PlayPosit  Allows you to add formative assessment features to a video from a library or popular sites, such as YouTube and Vimeo, to survey what students know about a topic.
  • RabbleBrowser  Allows a leader to facilitate a collaborative browsing experience.
  • Random Name/Word Picker  Facilitates random name picking. You can also add a list of keywords and use the tool to prompt students to guess words by providing definitions.
  • Socrative  Uses exercises and games to engage students with a topic.
  • Adobe Express  Lets you add graphics and visuals to exit tickets.
  • Typeform  Helps you add graphical elements to polls.

Generate word or tag clouds

  • EdWordle  Generates word clouds from any entered text to help aggregate responses and facilitate discussion. Word clouds are pictures composed of a cloud of smaller words that form a clue to the topic.
  • Tagxedo  Allows you to examine student consensus and facilitate dialogues.
  • Wordables  Helps you elicit evidence of learning or determine background knowledge about a topic.
  • WordArt  Includes a feature that allows the user to make each word an active link to connect to websites, including YouTube.

Get real-time feedback

  • Formative  Lets you assign activities, receive results in real time, and provide immediate feedback.
  • GoSoapBox  Works with the bring-your-own-device model and includes an especially intriguing feature: a confusion meter.
  • IXL  Breaks down options by grade level and content area.
  • Kaizena  Gives students real-time feedback on work they upload. You can use a highlighter or give verbal feedback. You can also attach resources.
  • Mentimeter  Allows you to use mobile phones or tablets to vote on any question a teacher asks, increasing student engagement.
  • Pear Deck  Lets you plan and build interactive presentations that students can participate in via their smart device. It also offers unique question types.
  • Plickers  Allows you to collect real-time formative assessment data without the need for student devices.
  • Quick Key  Helps you with accurate marking, instant grading, and immediate feedback.

Foster family communication  

  • Remind  Lets you text students and stay in touch with families.
  • Seesaw  Helps you improve family communication and makes formative assessment easy, while students can use the platform to document their learning.
  • Voxer  Lets you send recordings so families can hear how their students are doing, students can chat about their work, and you can provide feedback.

Strengthen teacher-to-student or student-to-student communication

  • AnswerGarden  Gives you access to formative assessment feedback.
  • Biblionasium  Lets you view books students have read, create reading challenges, and track progress. Students can also review and recommend books to their peers.
  • Classkick  Helps you post assignments for students, and both you and your students’ peers can provide feedback. Students can also monitor their progress and work.
  • TeacherEase Rubrics . This paid tool can help you ensure your rubrics are clear and accurate.
  • Lino  A virtual cork board of sticky notes, it lets students ask questions or make comments on their learning.
  • Online Stopwatch  Provides dozens of themed digital classroom timers to use during small- and whole-group discussions.
  • Peergrade  Helps you create assignments and upload rubrics. You can also anonymously assign peer review work. Students can upload and review work using the corresponding rubric.
  • Verso  Lets you set up learning using a URL. Space is provided for directions. Students can add their assignment, post comments, and respond to comments. You can group responses and check engagement levels.
  • VoiceThread  Allows you to create and share conversations on documents, diagrams, videos, pictures, and more.

Keep the conversation going with live chats

  • Yo Teach  A backchannel site great for keeping the conversation going with students.
  • Chatzy  Supports live, online chats in a private setting.

Create and store documents or assignments

  • Google Drive  Google Drive allows you to create documents students can collaborate on in real time using smartphones, tablets, and laptops.
  • Piazza  Lets you upload lectures, assignments, and homework; pose and respond to student questions; and poll students about class content. This tool is better suited for older students as it mimics post-secondary class instructional formats.

There are several resources for learning more about formative assessment and responsive instruction strategies. Consider our  formative practices workshops , where school and district teams can gain a better understanding of the role formative practice plays in instruction and the four foundational practices to use in the classroom. Or for a quick start, download our eBook  “Making it work: How formative assessment can supercharge your practice.”

Jump in, try new tools and methods, and have fun!

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View the eBook

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Teach. Learn. Grow. includes diverse perspectives that are meant to be a resource to educators and leaders across the country and around the world. The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of NWEA.

What is Edulastic and How Can it Be Used to Teach? Tips & Tricks

Edulastic is a student progress tracking tool that packs in Google support and lots of features

Edulastic

Edulastic is an online system designed for teachers to use as a way to monitor student progress by way of question-and-answer assessments. All that can be done right there within the platform.

The system is well developed and integrates with a number of other platforms to make adding this to a teacher's already busy list of tools simple. Everything is designed to be easy to use, with pre-designed questions and quizzes or the ability to create your own from scratch.

Teachers can use this to assess a milestone in quiz style, or as a way to enter homework assignments regularly. Either way it allows a broad overview, as well as drill-down detail, to see how the class and individual students are progressing. So is Edulastic for you?

What is Edulastic?

Edulastic  is a web-based assessment tool that allows teachers to create or select questions-and-answer forms that can easily be assigned to students.

Edulastic

All the answers are available right away and, if you use multiple choice, can be automatically marked for ease too. With state standards supports and a host of built-in questions from professional providers, there are easy ways to get up and running right away.

More than 80,000 questions are available, which are all standards-aligned and can be found in 20,000+ pre-made assessments that are ready to go. Or you can develop original assessments from scratch as needed.

Everything can be easily shared using a link or with student names, which are already registered in the system.

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How does Edulastic work?

Edulastic is easy to access and get using with a simple requirement of an email address and password to create an account. It is then possible to start using the system with all the free options, right away. 

More features are available in the paid-for version, however, most of the useful features are right there for free.

Edulastic

Teachers can upload a class roster to easily get all the students online using the system, or enter individual students to invite them to join one at a time, as needed.

It's then possible to start selecting or creating assignments right away. Pick from the 20,000 pre-made assessments or use the 80,000 questions to build your own. 

What are the best Edulastic features?

Edulastic is standards-aligned so all the questions and assessments are CCSS- and NGSS-aligned, with plenty more besides. 

Edulastic

The platforms features more than 30 interactive question types, including multiple choice, essay, drag-and-drop, and image labeling. Many of the questions have been created by the likes of Eureka Math and ETS, and will be recognizable by students as similar to those that they see on SBAC and PARCC tests. 

Since the results for each student are available right away it can be a great way to assess the class to see who may be struggling and could use extra assistance to keep progressing with the group. It's also great to look back and see those students who have progressed well through the year -- ideal when offering positive feedback.

Usefully, this system works well with Google Classroom and Canvas, making its integration into pre-existing school systems simple.

How much does Edulastic cost?

Edulastic is free to use but there are also paid versions available for teachers, schools and districts. 

Edulastic Free for the Teacher account and gets you all the main features.

Go for the Schools and Districts version -- charged at an individual rate -- and there is access to more in-depth data, standard reports, LMS integration, full-time support, growth and mastery measures, real-time data dashboard, an early warning system, state test scores and diagnostics, student subgroups, and more.

Edulastic best tips and tricks

Prep the class Don't just use this for testing, try using Edulastic as a way to assess knowledge before starting on a new subject so you can assess where and how to begin.

Work in-class Do the first assessment in the classroom with students so they can learn how to use the platform in an assistive, no-pressure situation.

Use rubrics Try creating your own assessments that use a formative assessment rubric of your own so that you can better plan what you'll work on next.

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Luke Edwards is a freelance writer and editor with more than two decades of experience covering tech, science, and health. He writes for many publications covering health tech, software and apps, digital teaching tools, VPNs, TV, audio, smart home, antivirus, broadband, smartphones, cars and much more.

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Kahoot! stands with Ukraine

Kahoot! is committed to supporting Ukrainian educators and learners affected by the current crisis. To protect the integrity of our platform and our users, we will suspend offering Kahoot!’s services in Russia, with the exception of self-study.

web based assessment assignment

Ukrainian educators and learners need our support

We are deeply troubled and concerned by the violence and loss of life resulting from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. We stand with the people of Ukraine and we hope for the swiftest and most peaceful possible end to the current crisis. 

Kahoot! has received a number of requests from schools and educators in Ukraine requesting the help of our services to continue teaching despite the disruption of the war. We have supported each of these and we are now offering Kahoot! EDU solutions for free for both K-12 and higher education institutions for one year to Ukrainian schools in need. In addition, we are fast-tracking translation and localization of the Kahoot! platform into Ukrainian. 

Suspending commercial services and sales in Russia

Our commercial footprint in the Russian market is very limited. We do not have offices or representation in the country, nor do we have any physical operations or data services there. The overwhelming majority of our users in Russia are teachers and students using our free service.

Kahoot! is abiding by the international sanctions regime, and does not allow sales to sanctioned individuals or entities in Russia. Shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Kahoot! initiated a process to suspend offering of all commercial services in Russia. This includes but is not limited to online sales, assisted sales, app store sales and prohibiting sales to Russian corporations and organizations.

Prioritizing safe and secure use of the Kahoot! platform

As part of our mission to make learning awesome, and as education remains a fundamental human right, we offer teachers, students and personal users free access to our platform. We do this in more than 200 countries and regions in a spirit similar to public commons services, such as Wikipedia. 

Similarly, inclusivity is one of Kahoot!’s overarching values. As such, our aim is to, whenever and wherever possible, offer children, schools and others the opportunity to use digital tools for impactful education and learning, irrespective of their background or location. This has been our guiding principle also for offering our service in Russia.

Among our first responses to the crisis was to swiftly expand our global moderation team’s monitoring on all Russia-related content to safeguard the integrity of the platform. 

However, as the situation continues to escalate, it is vital that we are able to ensure that our platform is used according to our own guidelines and standards. Therefore, in addition to suspending sales, we will be taking all possible and necessary steps to suspend access to Kahoot! services in Russia, with the eventual exception of self-study mode which will feature only content verified by Kahoot!.

This will enable students, school children and other individual users to continue their learning journeys both safely and responsibly. We will continue to assess ways in which our services can be offered safely and responsibly to support all learners and educators, also those based in Russia. 

Supporting our employees 

At Kahoot!, we are not just a team in name, we are a team in practice. As such, we are committed to the well-being of our employees, especially those with ties to Ukraine, or those that in other ways are particularly affected by the war. We are providing these colleagues with any support we can. 

Acknowledging the current situation, the Kahoot! Group made an emergency aid donation to Save the Children and the Norwegian Refugee Council. This is a contribution to support life-saving assistance and protection for innocent Ukrainian children, families and refugees. 

As the situation in Ukraine continues to develop our teams across the company are actively monitoring the crisis so that we can respond in the most responsible and supportive way possible. 

Our hearts go out to the people of Ukraine, their loved ones, and anyone affected by this crisis. 

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