Education

Group Role Assignment

The Group Role Assignment helps you manage classrooms, lessons, labs, or tutoring sessions by providing a simple, unbiased spin to choose the next step. Use it when everyone agrees that any option is acceptable and you want to move forward quickly without debate. This particular template is focused on group role assignment so it stays relevant to your specific need.

Use this template →
30
Suggested entries
Fully editable
Free
No signup required

Suggested Starter Entries

Use these as a starting list. After you click “Use this template”, you can add, remove, or edit any entries before spinning.

Student 1
Student 2
Student 3
Student 4
Student 5
Student 6
Student 7
Student 8
Student 9
Student 10
Student 11
Student 12
Student 13
Student 14
Student 15
Student 16
Student 17
Student 18
Student 19
Student 20
Student 21
Student 22
Student 23
Student 24
Showing 24 of 30. You can view the full list after loading the template on the wheel.

When to use this wheel

Use Group Role Assignment when you need a fair classroom pick without calling on the same students by habit.

Use it for student turns, reading order, review prompts, station rotation, group roles, or quick learning games.

Use it when students should see that the next turn or prompt came from the same visible process for everyone.

Sample entries you can paste

These entries are plain text and visible in the page HTML. Copy them into the wheel as a starting point, then replace anything that does not fit your group or event.

  1. Student 1
  2. Student 2
  3. Student 3
  4. Student 4
  5. Student 5
  6. Student 6
  7. Student 7
  8. Student 8
  9. Student 9
  10. Student 10
  11. Student 11
  12. Student 12

How to customize this template

To customise your Group Role Assignment, replace names with seat numbers or initials, add age-appropriate prompts, and decide whether to delete winners to prevent repeats. Always tailor the entries to the participants and context, and ensure the list reflects what you actually intend to decide. For example, in education contexts, you might add items that reflect current priorities or remove ones that no longer apply.

Fairness checklist

  • Include the full class list, group list, or prompt list before spinning.
  • Use initials, seat numbers, or group names if privacy matters in a shared classroom screen.
  • Remove a selected student or prompt when you want everyone to get a turn before repeats.
  • Keep labels short so students can read the wheel from the back of the room or on mobile.

Classroom, work, and event examples

Classroom

Use Group Role Assignment to pick the next reader, presenter, station, review question, or classroom helper.

Work

Training teams can use Group Role Assignment for workshop practice order, quiz prompts, or facilitator rotation.

Events

School events can use Group Role Assignment for activity stations, prize turns, or game prompts.

FAQ

How do I use the Group Role Assignment?
Begin by adding all the relevant options for your situation, then spin once to select the winner. 10–30 entries work well; adjust for class size and subject complexity This keeps things fair and manageable.
Can I edit the entries in the Group Role Assignment?
Yes. You can edit, add, or remove entries to suit your needs. Update the wheel whenever participants change or when new options become available, keeping it aligned with your current context in education.
What’s an ideal number of options for the Group Role Assignment?
10–30 entries work well; adjust for class size and subject complexity This ensures the wheel is neither too short nor too overwhelming. Adjust the number as your group or scenario evolves.

Ready to spin?

Load this template and start making fair, random decisions in seconds.

Use Group Role Assignment