Split a roster into several groups
Use Random Group Generator when you need three or more teams or any kind of balancing logic.
Tools
Choose the right tool for group allocation, pair matching, fair calling, or group naming from one hub page.
Tools
Split participants into balanced groups in seconds
Use Random Group Generator when you need three or more teams or any kind of balancing logic.
Tools
Create random pairs fast for class discussion, speaking practice, and workshop icebreakers.
Use Random Pair Generator for class discussion, speaking practice, peer review, and workshop icebreakers.
Tools
Pick students fairly for class participation, answer checks, and online teaching.
Use Random Student Picker for calling on students, answer checks, and participation order.
Tools
Generate practical group names fast for classrooms, work teams, and events.
Use Group Name Generator when you want practical naming ideas before or alongside the team setup.
Quick answer
This hub helps users identify the real job first, then open the tool that matches that job.
Use the home page for larger groups, the pair page for two-person activities, the picker page for fair calling, and the naming page for group names.
What are you trying to do?
Use Random Group Generator when you need three or more teams or any kind of balancing logic.
Use Random Pair Generator for class discussion, speaking practice, peer review, and workshop icebreakers.
Use Random Student Picker for calling on students, answer checks, and participation order.
Use Group Name Generator when you want practical naming ideas before or alongside the team setup.
A simple four-step flow from decision to execution.
Decide whether the job is grouping, pairing, calling, or naming.
Start on the narrowest page that still matches the task.
Grouping, pairing, and picking use rosters. Naming uses keywords or context prompts.
Create the result, make small adjustments if needed, then export or share it.
Four tools for four high-frequency jobs
Best for larger groups, team allocation, and balancing logic.
Best for partner activities, speaking practice, and two-person workflows.
Best for fair calling, answer checks, and presentation order.
Best for lightweight naming of class groups, project squads, and event teams.
Typical use cases
Teachers can switch between full grouping, partner work, fair calling, and naming without leaving the same product ecosystem.
Facilitators can move between breakouts, pair work, calling prompts, and light team naming as the session changes.
Organizers can name teams, assign groups, rotate pairs, and run fair participation prompts from one toolkit.
Online instructors can use pair matching and random calling to keep remote sessions moving.
Why use the tools hub?
“Choosing by task instead of by guesswork made our session planning much smoother.”
Related guides
Understand whether your task is about two-person matching or multi-team allocation before you choose the tool.
Read articleUse Random Student Picker for fair calling and Random Group Generator for team formation. They solve different classroom jobs.
Read articleUse Group Name Generator for lighter naming needs such as class teams, project groups, and workshop squads. Team naming is usually broader.
Read articleRandom picking helps teachers widen participation and reduce habitual calling patterns without overcomplicating the lesson.
Read articleQuick answers about tool selection, fairness, and workflow boundaries.
Use the pair page when every participant only needs one partner. Use the home page when the roster needs several groups.
Yes. First create groups, then use the picker to choose who speaks for each team or who answers next.
No. It is intended for lightweight naming jobs such as class groups, project squads, and event teams.
Yes. Results can be copied, exported, or shared depending on the tool and workflow.
Choose the job first, then open the right page.