
✨ Summary: Choose 10 Free software tools created for teachers to plan faster, engage more students, and reduce grading time in 2026.
Table of Contents 📒
Practical List of the Best Free Tools for Teachers in 2026
Teachers don’t need more apps. They need a small set of tools that save time, improve student work, and keep the routine simple.
This guide is a practical shortlist of 10 popular tools that many teachers use in 2026 and is also useful for admins and department heads who want a clear, classroom-based view of what these tools can help with.
How these tools will help you in 2026
Most tools fall into one of these categories:
- Plan and Prep: create materials, organize activities, build routines
- Engage and Check for Understanding: quick practice, formative checks, review games
- Create and Share Content: visuals, handouts, student-facing instructions
- Communicate: families, reminders, classroom updates
- Manage Access: rostering, logins, integrations
- Give Feedback and Grade: faster feedback, more consistency, better student revision
This list covers each category, with a focus on the one that takes up the most time: feedback and grading.
Are They All Free Tools?
Yes but with a caveat. Many teacher tools are free to start and then offer paid plans for advanced features, higher usage limits, or school-wide admin controls. In this post, free means at least one of the following is true:
- There’s a free tier that’s useful in real classrooms
- There’s a free plan for individual teachers
- There’s a free version that works for occasional use
If you’re evaluating for a school or district, treat this list as a shortlist to test, then confirm pricing and requirements with the vendor.
Practical List of the Best Tools for Teachers in 2026
Below, each tool has a simple format:
- Best for
- Why Teachers Use It
- Watch Outs
- Quick Start
1) CoGrader
Best for: ELA teachers grading writing, rubric-based feedback, faster scoring, and comments
Why Teachers Use It
CoGrader is the AI Essay Grading tool that speed up essay grading by generating a strong first pass that the teacher can review and edit, provide quality feedback on essays in 80% less time.
Supports rubric-aligned scoring so feedback is more consistent across a class
Watch Outs
Set clear expectations: it’s a teacher assistant.
Quick Start
- Start with a rubric you already use or create you
- Run one assignment through as a pilot
- Review, edit, and return feedback
- Save the best comment patterns as your personal feedback shortcuts
You can test CoGrader for Free by clicking here! ✍️
2) Flippity
Best for: Quick classroom games and templates built from spreadsheets
Why Teachers Use It
Creates simple learning activities without heavy setup
Useful for review days, stations, and lightweight practice
Watch Outs
Template-based tools can feel limited if you want fully custom interactions
Quick Start
- Pick one template for your next lesson
- Build it once, then reuse it with new content each unit
3) Edpuzzle
Best for: Video lessons with checks for understanding
Why Teachers Use It
Turns videos into active practice with embedded questions
Helpful for flipped lessons, sub plans, and reteaching
Watch Outs
If students have weak device access, video-based workflows can be uneven
Quick Start
- Start with one short video
- Add 3 to 5 questions that match your lesson objective
- Use results as a quick formative check
4) Canva
Best for: Teacher-made visuals, handouts, slides, posters, and student project templates
Why Teachers Use It
Makes classroom materials look clean and consistent
Strong for student choice boards and project deliverables
Watch Outs
It’s easy to overdesign. Keep templates simple and reusable
Quick Start
- Create one unit template for slides and handouts
- Duplicate it for every unit to save planning time
5) Kahoot!
Best for: High-energy review and whole-class engagement
Why Teachers Use It
Fast setup, fast engagement
Good for retrieval practice and quick checks
Watch Outs
Can reward speed over thinking. Use it for review, not deep assessment
Quick Start
- Use it once per week as a retrieval routine
- Add a short reflection question after the game
6) ClassDojo
Best for: Classroom culture, routines, and family communication in many K to 8 contextsWhy Teachers Use It
Supports consistent routines and positive reinforcement
Makes family updates easier
Watch Outs
If your school has strict communication policies, confirm what’s allowed
Quick Start
- Choose 3 class values you will reinforce consistently
- Use it for one routine first, then expand
7) Seesaw
Best for: Student portfolios and student work sharing, often elementary and middle schoolWhy Teachers Use It
Helps students share work and reflect
Useful for progress documentation and family visibility
Watch Outs
Portfolio workflows can become time-heavy if expectations are unclear
Quick Start
- Pick one portfolio artifact per week
- Use a simple reflection prompt students can repeat
8) Plickers
Best for: Fast formative checks with minimal student devicesWhy Teachers Use It
Works well when students don’t have 1:1 devices
Quick pulse checks during instruction
Watch Outs
Best for multiple-choice style checks, not open-ended reasoning
Quick Start
- Use it as an exit ticket twice a week
- Track which questions consistently confuse students
9) Remind
Best for: Announcements and messaging for classes, students, and families
Why Teachers Use It
Simplifies reminders and updates
Helps reduce I didn’t know moments
Watch Outs
Messaging can expand endlessly. Set boundaries for response times
Quick Start
- Schedule a weekly message cadence
- Keep messages short, consistent, and predictable
10) ClassLink
Best for: Easier access and login management in schools and districts
Why Teachers Use It
Reduces login friction and forgotten passwords
Helps keep tools organized in one place
Watch Outs
Typically more relevant at the school or district level than individual teachers
Quick Start
- Ask your IT team which apps are already approved
- Start by using it for your top 3 classroom tools
For ELA K-12 Teachers
If you teach ELA, your time sink is usually not planning. It’s grading writing and giving meaningful feedback.
A practical ELA stack:
CoGrader
for rubric-aligned essay feedback and faster grading workflows
Canva
for writing organizers, exemplars, and student publishing templates
Edpuzzle
for short skill lessons (thesis, evidence, commentary, revision moves)
Remind
for deadlines, revision reminders, and family communication
Simple routine that works:
- Students draft
- You grade a first pass with rubric-aligned feedback
- Students revise using 1 to 2 clear next steps
- You do a lighter second pass focused on growth
Quick Picks (If You Want to Start Today)
- If you want to save grading time, start with CoGrader
- If you want better visuals and templates, start with Canva
- If you want fast formative checks, start with Kahoot! or Plickers
- If you want video-based practice, start with Edpuzzle
FAQ
Are These Tools Safe to Use in Schools?
It depends on your school and district policies. For school-wide use, confirm approval requirements with your admin or IT team.
For CoGrader, we have an AI policy that can help you understand that better.
Should Teachers Use One Tool for Everything?
Most teachers do best with a small stack: one tool for grading and feedback, one for content creation, and one for engagement or checks.
Which Tool Should an ELA Department Test First?
Start with the tool that reduces the biggest shared pain. In ELA, that’s usually essay grading and rubric-aligned feedback.

Daniel Medeiros
CoGrader team member focused on educational technology.
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