Quizlet
Flashcards, practice tests, and study modes for students.
Alternatives · 2026
Game-based quizzes and learning activities for classrooms.
5 hand-curated alternatives from MintedSaaS's directory. See the Kahoot listing →
Kahoot is a quiz-based learning platform built for classroom engagement. Teachers create multiple-choice quizzes and games that students answer in real-time, either synchronously (all together) or asynchronously (self-paced). The product sits at the intersection of gamification and assessment tools, competing with older flashcard software and newer adaptive learning systems. Kahoot's strength is generating quick, visible participation in group settings—the leaderboard and timed-answer mechanics keep students focused. It's used widely in K-12 schools, corporate training, and higher education when the goal is energy over depth.
Most teachers use Kahoot to run a quick 10-minute quiz at the start or end of a lesson, or to review before a test. It's not designed for long-form instruction or personalized learning paths. The typical buyer is a classroom teacher who wants to replace passive worksheet review with something that keeps 25 students engaged at once. For that job, Kahoot works well. Visitors looking at alternatives typically want either more sophisticated adaptive learning (where the quiz difficulty shifts to match each student), stronger reporting to track individual growth over time, or integration with their existing learning management system rather than a standalone game.
Flashcards, practice tests, and study modes for students.
Math learning game adopted widely in elementary schools.
Gamified app for learning languages in short daily sessions.
Free educational app for ages 2-8 from Khan Academy.
Subscription early-learning app for kids aged 2 to 8.
Quizlet, Prodigy, Duolingo, Khan Academy Kids, and ABCmouse all offer game-based learning, but each has a different strength. Quizlet is strongest for memorization and self-paced study; Prodigy for math-specific adaptive learning; Duolingo for language acquisition; Khan Academy Kids for structured early-childhood curriculum; ABCmouse for comprehensive preschool content. Pick based on subject, grade level, and whether you need classroom-synchronized play or individual pacing.
Yes. Quizlet has a free tier for flashcard study (no real-time games). Khan Academy Kids is completely free. ABCmouse offers a limited free trial. Duolingo's core course is free, though without some bonus content. Prodigy requires payment for the full experience. If you need a zero-cost classroom quiz tool, Khan Academy Kids or Duolingo work best.
Decide first whether you need real-time synchronized play (everyone answers the same question at the same time) or asynchronous self-paced learning. Then define your goal: quick engagement and memorization favor Kahoot or Quizlet; building skills over weeks favor Prodigy or Khan Academy Kids. Check whether your students can access the tool on their devices, and whether you need to integrate with your school's learning management system.
Most alternatives work on web browsers, iOS, and Android. Quizlet and Duolingo excel on mobile. Khan Academy Kids is tablet-first. Prodigy runs on web and tablet. ABCmouse is strongest on tablets and computers. Verify hardware requirements before selecting, especially if your school has older Chromebooks or limited device budgets.
Khan Academy Kids and Prodigy offer detailed per-student progress tracking over time. Kahoot and Quizlet show quiz scores but less long-term trend data. If you need to report growth to parents or identify struggling students, Prodigy and Khan Academy Kids give you more granular data.
Yes, all of them work as standalone products. Teachers can sign up with an email address and start creating quizzes or activities immediately without integrating into Clever, Google Classroom, or Canvas. Integration is optional but available on most platforms if your school uses one.
Khan Academy Kids and ABCmouse target preschool through early elementary. Both have simpler interfaces, shorter activities, and younger-appropriate curriculum. Duolingo works for any age but has gentler early levels. Prodigy and Quizlet serve all ages but aren't specially designed for very young learners.
A quiz tool (Kahoot, Quizlet) presents the same questions to all students and records their answers. An adaptive platform (Prodigy, Khan Academy Kids) adjusts difficulty and content based on performance, creating personalized learning paths. Adaptive tools take longer to show results but track growth better; quiz tools are faster to deploy and better for quick reviews.