AbraCalc

Would You Rather — School Edition

A classroom Would You Rather deck built for real discussion, not just laughs. Two thoughtful options, a class vote, and a tally that opens up a five-minute talking point.

Built by the AbraCalc team

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How to play

  1. Read the two options shown in the panels out loud to the class.
  2. Students tap the panel matching their choice — every tap counts live and the fill bars update instantly.
  3. Ask a few students to explain their pick before moving on to the next prompt.
  4. Tap New Question to pull the next dilemma from the shuffled deck, or paste your own A | B pairs to replace the built-in set.

Two thoughtful, curriculum-adjacent options appear side by side — learn one subject in depth or five subjects a little, present to the class or write a report instead — and students vote by tapping the panel that matches their pick. Every tap counts instantly, so the fill bar behind each option grows live while the class watches the vote take shape, giving you a natural moment to ask a few students to explain their reasoning before moving on. A small tag above the question shows the discussion category, from assessment to collaboration to learning styles, so you always know why the prompt is on screen. Tap New Question to pull the next dilemma from a shuffled deck that won't repeat until every prompt has been used, or paste your own A versus B pairs to build a set tailored to your unit. No accounts, no setup, works on one shared screen.

Frequently asked questions

Is this the same deck as the party version of Would You Rather?
No. This edition uses a completely separate, curriculum-adjacent question set focused on learning styles, assessment, and classroom habits, with zero crude humor — built specifically for classroom discussion, not party laughs.
Can I use this for a subject-specific warm-up?
Yes — paste your own pairs into the custom box, one per line in the format Option A | Option B, and they completely replace the built-in classroom deck with prompts tied to your current unit.
Does it track which students voted which way?
No. Votes are anonymous tally counts on a shared screen, so the tool encourages open discussion rather than tracking or grading individual answers.