How do you conduct an online test for students?
Sign in free, build the paper, tick the correct answer on each MCQ, set a fair timer, and share one WhatsApp link with your class. Students open the link on any phone browser, no app and no login needed just to attempt. MCQ and short answers score on their own, you mark the long answers, and every score lands in one report. Best of all, each child gets an answer sheet with the right answers, so the test doubles as revision.
Conduct an online test in 6 steps
From a blank test to scores in your hand.
- 1
Sign in and start the test
Open Quizzory and sign in with your free SurveyHeart account, which you need to create a test. Tap to make a new quiz and name it clearly, like Class 10 Physics Unit 3 Light, so students open the right paper and you can find it later in your list.
- 2
Type the questions and mark the right answer
Add MCQ for quick checks, short answer for one word or numeric replies, and long answer where a child must write a few lines. On every MCQ, tick the correct option as you type it, because that one tap is what lets Quizzory score it for you. Read your own key once before you move on.
- 3
Set a fair timer
Turn on the timer and give about one minute per MCQ, so a 20 question class test gets around 20 minutes. When the time runs out the test auto-submits, so a slow phone or a distracted child does not get extra minutes over the rest of the class.
- 4
Share one link on the class group
Tap share to copy one link and post it in your class WhatsApp group with a start time. Students open it on any phone browser, with no app to install and no login just to attempt. Send the same link again two minutes before start so latecomers are not lost.
- 5
Mark the long answers
MCQ and short answers are scored for you. For long answers you read each one and award the marks yourself, so written work is judged the way you want.
- 6
Read scores and the answer sheet
Every child sees a percent score and an answer sheet with the right answers, so the test doubles as revision. You get a report of every score, and the leaderboard ranks students by score then by speed when you refresh. Open a weak child's answer sheet to see exactly which questions tripped them.
The same test, on every student phone
A timer that submits on its own, one question at a time with clear right and wrong marks, an instant score and a rank list.
A timer that submits on its own, with one clear question at a time.
A percent ring with a correct, wrong and skipped split, the moment a student submits.
After they finish, students see the right answers, so the test doubles as revision.
Tips for a smooth online test
Pick a tight timer
Match the minutes to the number of questions so students stay focused and the test auto-submits on time.
Double-check MCQ answers
One wrong correct-answer marking throws off the whole class, so verify your key before you share.
Name the test clearly
A clear title like Subject + Unit + Date stops the wrong batch from opening the wrong test.
Block time for long answers
Long answers need you to award marks by hand, so keep a few quiet minutes aside to evaluate them fairly.
Send a short reminder
Drop the same WhatsApp link again 10 minutes before start with the test name typed above it, so latecomers spot the right one in a busy group.
Tell them no app is needed
Remind students it opens in any phone browser with no app and no login, so nobody gets stuck before they begin.
Ready to test your class?
Build it now and share one WhatsApp link in minutes.
Questions people ask
Do students need to install an app or log in?add
No. Students open your link in any phone browser and start the test. There is no app to install and no login needed just to attempt. Only you, the teacher, need a free SurveyHeart account to build the test.
What if a child loses signal in the middle of the test?add
Ask them to reopen the same link on the same phone. As long as they have not submitted, they can carry on. Keep tests short and time bound so a dropped connection does not cost a child the whole paper, and tell the class to attempt on a steady wifi or data spot.
How are the tests scored?add
MCQ and short answers are scored for you automatically. Long answers are marked by you, the teacher, who awards the marks for each written answer. The report mixes both into one score per child.
Is there negative marking for wrong answers?add
No. A wrong answer simply scores zero, Quizzory never takes a score below zero. So a guess can never pull a child's marks down below what they earned on the rest.
What happens when the timer runs out?add
The test auto-submits on its own when time is up, with whatever the child has done so far, so nobody can keep answering past the limit you set.
Is the leaderboard live?add
No, it is not live or real-time. The leaderboard ranks students by score and then by speed, and it updates only when you refresh the page, so reload it after the deadline to read the final order.