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Best Quiz Maker Tools for Students and Teachers in 2026

Noah Wilson
Noah Wilson

·9 min read

Best Quiz Maker Tools for Students and Teachers in 2026 — CuFlow Blog

Quiz makers have always been useful for teachers building assessments. What's changed recently is that AI has made them useful for students too — not just for creating quizzes to test others, but for generating practice questions from their own study materials. Those are meaningfully different use cases, and the tools that serve them well differ considerably.

This guide covers both: quiz makers for teachers and educators who need to build assessments, and AI-powered tools for students who want to test their own knowledge.

What Makes a Good Quiz Maker?

For teachers and educators, the priorities are typically: variety of question types, formatting options, ease of distribution, and grading automation. Being able to import content from a document or slide deck saves significant time.

For students, the priorities shift. The most valuable thing a student quiz tool can do is generate questions from their specific course content — not from a generic question bank — and then use those questions for spaced repetition practice. The research on retrieval practice is consistent: testing yourself is substantially more effective for retention than re-reading or highlighting.

The tools below are evaluated with both audiences in mind.

Best Quiz Maker Tools in 2026

Google Forms (Free)

Google Forms is the standard free option for building straightforward quizzes. It handles multiple choice, short answer, and longer response questions with basic auto-grading for objective questions. Results go directly into Google Sheets, which makes it easy to analyse class performance.

It's not designed for anything sophisticated. There's no built-in spaced repetition, no AI generation, no branching logic of any complexity. But for teachers who need a quick quiz that students can complete on any device without downloading anything, it's entirely adequate.

Best for: Simple assessments, classroom quizzes, situations where accessibility matters more than features.

Typeform

Typeform presents one question at a time in a cleaner visual format than Google Forms. This makes quizzes feel less like a standard form and more like an interactive experience — which can help with engagement for longer assessments.

It offers more question types and some logic features (show different questions based on previous answers). The free plan is fairly limited; paid plans unlock the more useful features.

Best for: Surveys and knowledge checks where presentation matters; embedded quizzes on websites.

Quizlet (with AI features)

Quizlet has been a student favourite for flashcard-based learning for years, and its recent AI features have made it more useful as a quiz maker. You can generate quiz questions from the content in your study sets, or import content to create a set.

The AI generation works reasonably well for factual content. The spaced repetition logic is functional. Quizlet has raised its prices and moved many features behind a paid wall, which is why students have been exploring alternatives — see our full Quizlet alternatives guide.

Best for: Flashcard-based studying, factual content, spaced repetition with pre-built sets.

Kahoot

Kahoot is primarily a live quiz platform where participants join with a game code and compete in real time. It's been widely adopted in educational settings because the competitive format increases engagement.

For individual study, it's not ideal. The time pressure format suits testing quick recall rather than deep understanding. For teachers who want a high-energy class activity, it's a strong choice.

Best for: Live classroom activities, engagement-driven learning, group quiz sessions.

Mentimeter

Mentimeter combines quiz-making with real-time audience response tools. It's useful for presentations and lectures where you want to embed knowledge checks. Teachers can see class responses live as students submit them.

Like Kahoot, it's designed for the classroom context rather than individual study. It handles more question types than Kahoot and integrates more smoothly into presentation workflows.

Best for: Classroom polling and knowledge checks during lectures.

Cuflow (AI Quiz Generation from Your Materials)

Cuflow takes a different approach: rather than providing a question bank or building assessments from scratch, it generates quiz questions directly from your uploaded course materials. Upload your lecture notes, textbook chapters, or PDF readings, and Cuflow produces practice questions grounded in exactly what your course covers.

This matters because generic quiz tools can't target your specific syllabus. The questions Cuflow generates reflect the terminology, frameworks, and specific content your lecturer emphasised — which is what you're actually being assessed on.

The workflow is better suited to exam preparation than to quick knowledge checks. If you want to build flashcard sets from specific readings and then practice them with spaced repetition, Cuflow handles that end-to-end rather than requiring you to manually create questions from your reading.

Best for: Students preparing for exams, processing lecture notes into practice questions, revision from specific course materials.

ProProfs Quiz Maker

ProProfs is a professional quiz-building platform with a wider feature set than Google Forms. It handles branching quizzes, timed assessments, certificates, and a range of question types including image-based questions and fill-in-the-blank.

The free plan is limited; paid plans cover features like detailed reporting and removal of ProProfs branding. It's a reasonable middle option for educators who need more than Google Forms but don't need an enterprise platform.

Best for: Professional assessments, employee training, detailed quiz reporting.

Formative

Formative is designed specifically for classroom use, with features focused on teacher monitoring and student feedback. Teachers can see responses in real time as students work through a quiz, which is useful for identifying gaps before moving on.

It integrates with Google Classroom and other LMS platforms. The question types are standard, but the live classroom monitoring is a genuine differentiator for teachers.

Best for: Classroom formative assessment, live monitoring of student responses.

Quiz Makers for Students vs. Teachers: Which to Use?

The tools above divide fairly clearly by use case.

For teachers building assessments: Google Forms for simplicity and accessibility. ProProfs or Mentimeter if you need more question types or live interaction. Kahoot for engagement-focused classroom activities.

For students studying independently: The most effective quiz-based study is self-testing on your own course content. That requires either creating questions yourself (time-consuming) or using a tool that generates them from your materials. Cuflow is built for that specific workflow. Quizlet works if you're happy with flashcard-style questioning on factual content.

See also: best AI quiz generators for a deeper comparison of AI-specific quiz tools.

The Evidence for Quiz-Based Learning

It's worth being direct about why quiz makers matter for studying, rather than just covering tools.

The testing effect — also called retrieval practice — is one of the most replicated findings in cognitive psychology. Testing yourself on material, even with feedback, produces significantly better long-term retention than re-studying the same material. A 2006 meta-analysis by Roediger and Karpicke found that students who tested themselves after reading retained 50% more information after a week than students who reread the material three times.

Most students don't use quizzes for this purpose because creating good quiz questions from course content takes time. AI quiz tools change that equation. The amount of practice testing that's now possible without manual question-creation effort is one of the more genuine improvements AI has brought to studying.

How to Use Quiz Tools Effectively

Creating quizzes isn't the same as using them well. A few practices make quiz-based study significantly more effective:

Space your practice. Quizzing yourself the same day you learn something has modest benefits. Quizzing yourself a day later, then a week later, then two weeks later produces dramatically better retention. A spaced repetition system that schedules this automatically removes the effort of remembering to return to material.

Get immediate feedback. Knowing you got something wrong isn't as valuable as knowing why. Quizzes with explanations for incorrect answers produce better learning than bare correct/incorrect feedback.

Mix question types. Multiple choice tests recognition; short answer tests recall. Both matter for exam preparation, but recall practice (closed-book, no prompts) is harder and more valuable.

Don't just test easy questions. Students systematically overtest content they already know and avoid content they're weak on. A quiz tool that tracks which questions you've answered correctly and which incorrectly, and adjusts accordingly, handles this better than manually selected questions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best free quiz maker?

Google Forms is the most accessible free quiz maker for building and sharing assessments. Quizlet's free tier is functional for flashcard-style studying. For AI-generated questions from your own content, Cuflow offers a free tier with a limited number of generations per month.

Can AI make a quiz from a PDF?

Yes. Several tools — including Cuflow — allow you to upload a PDF and generate quiz questions from its content automatically. Quality varies depending on how structured the document is. Well-formatted lecture notes and textbook chapters tend to produce better questions than dense research papers.

How do I make a quiz for students?

Google Forms is the fastest route for simple quizzes. Set up your questions, enable auto-grading for objective questions, and share the link. For more features (certificates, branching, detailed reporting), ProProfs or Typeform add functionality at the cost of some setup time.

What quiz maker do teachers use most?

Google Forms is the most widely used in school settings because it's free, requires no software installation, and integrates with Google Classroom. Kahoot is common for live classroom activities. Quizlet is popular in secondary schools for student-led revision.

Is there a quiz maker with spaced repetition?

Quizlet uses a spaced repetition algorithm for flashcard practice. Anki is the most powerful standalone spaced repetition tool, though it's not primarily a quiz builder — it's designed for flashcard decks. Cuflow incorporates spaced repetition into its AI-generated question sets from your course materials.

Summary

The best quiz maker depends entirely on what you're trying to do. For building assessments to share with others, Google Forms is the fastest free option; ProProfs or Mentimeter if you need more features. For individual study, the most effective approach is AI-generated questions from your specific course content — Cuflow does this better than general quiz builders.

The underlying principle is retrieval practice, and any quiz maker becomes more valuable when you use it systematically rather than occasionally. Building the habit of regular self-testing, spaced over time, consistently outperforms revision strategies that rely on re-reading or passive review.


Noah Wilson
Noah Wilson

AI Research Writer

Noah Wilson is an AI research writer with a background in cognitive psychology and computer science. He covers AI tutoring systems, adaptive learning platforms, and evidence-based study strategies for a global English-speaking audience.

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