For teachers, facilitators, and hosts
A random group generator is most helpful when the task is simple:
turn a list of names into workable groups without managing a saved
roster or setting up a full classroom app. Teachers can use it for
quick reading groups, lab tables, project teams, review games, or
seating changes. Facilitators can use it for breakout discussions,
practice rounds, feedback partners, and icebreaker teams.
If you need carefully balanced teams, treat the output as a starting
point. Random groups can reduce visible picking pressure, but they
do not know who is absent, who needs support, or which participants
should be separated.
Exporting and sharing groups
Copy Results is best for chat, email, slides, or a shared document.
Download CSV is better when you want the groups in a spreadsheet,
attendance tracker, seating plan, or event operations file. Print
Results focuses on the assignment sheet so it can be read aloud or
posted in a room.
The random group generator does not require an account or upload
step for a normal roster. Still, names may be sensitive, so check
your browser, extensions, shared screen, and local policies before
displaying a participant list publicly.