Game-Based Widgets
The focused reference for practice widgets that rely on repetition, pattern recognition, and play.
Who this is for
Teachers who want students to reinforce content through game-like interaction.
What this page answers
- Which game widget fits the practice goal?
- What are the common game widget types?
- When should I choose a game widget instead of a direct exercise?
Prerequisites
- a lesson open in the editor
Game widget reference
| Widget | Insert method | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Flashcards | /flashcard | self-paced vocabulary review |
| Memory Game | /memorygame | pair recognition and recall |
| Word Scramble | /wordscramble | spelling and word form reinforcement |
| Word Search | /wordsearch | vocabulary recognition |
| Crossword | /crossword | clue-driven spelling and vocabulary |
When to use game widgets
Choose a game widget when:
- you want repetition without repeating the same exercise format
- the goal is reinforcement rather than formal checking
- you need a lighter interaction inside a longer lesson