The buzz coming out of the Tech Share Live session at FETC today was all about the “ghost mode” in Kahoot. Kahoot’s ghost mode essentially gives students the opportunity to play a Kahoot review game against themselves. In ghost mode students measure their progress against themselves.
How ghost mode works:
First, run a Kahoot game as you normally would. At the end of the game select “ghost mode” to run the game again. In ghost mode students play against their own scores from the previous game. Then when you run the game students will be competing against the “ghost” version of themselves from the previous running of the game. For example, I play a game as a student in the first running of a game then in the second running of the game I’ll be competing against my previous score as well as those of my classmates.
What is Kahoot?
Kahoot provides a fun way to gather feedback from a group through their phones, iPads, Chromebooks, or any other device that has a web browser and an Internet connection. You can include pictures and or videos as part of each question that you create and share in a Kahoot activity. Players are awarded points for answering correctly and quickly. Or you can turn off the points system to use Kahoot in a non-competitive environment.
How to use quizzes from the Kahoot gallery:
One of the features of Kahoot that I frequently demonstrate in my workshops is the option to duplicate and edit quizzes that teachers have contributed to the public Kahoot quiz gallery. Duplicating and editing existing quizzes can save you a lot of time when you need to find a quick review activity for your students. In the video embedded below I demonstrate how to find, duplicate, and edit quizzes in Kahoot’s public quiz gallery.