For Schools & Teachers.
Faster attendance. Homework that turns itself in. Parents who actually open the newsletter. A QR taped to the right wall does the job of three printed handouts, and you can make as many as you need — free, no signup, no expiry.
Make Your Classroom QR Code →Classroom QR codes that earn their place
Attendance
Poster by the door, link to a Google Form that timestamps each scan. Morning roll-call in 30 seconds.
Homework Submission
One QR per assignment, opens Google Classroom or a shared folder. No more lost USBs.
Scavenger Hunts
Different QR at each station, each links to a different clue. Works for history, language, science — anywhere clues make a topic stick.
Parent Newsletters
QR on the printed flyer goes home, parents scan once, you update the page weekly without reprinting.
How to make a classroom QR code
- Decide what scanning the QR should do — open a Form, open Classroom, open a video, open your calendar.
- Paste the URL into QRKong. Pick a colour that matches the activity (red = stop & scan, blue = info, etc.).
- Add a label like "Period 3 Attendance" under the code so students don't scan the wrong one.
- Print, laminate, stick on the wall. Test the scan with two or three student phones before the lesson.
Common questions
Attendance via Google Form. Print a QR on a poster by the door, link it to a Form that timestamps each scan with the student's name, and the morning roll-call is automated.
Homework submission is the second-easiest: each assignment gets a QR that opens a Google Classroom upload page or shared folder.
Yes if it points at a stable URL — a Google Form, a Classroom link, a YouTube playlist. Reprint nothing, just update what the Form / Classroom / playlist contains.
For year-over-year reuse, link to a stable page you control (a class blog, a shared folder) and update the contents — the printed QR stays valid forever.
Always pair QR activities with a fallback — a short typed URL printed next to the code, or a shared classroom tablet that any student can grab.
For young classes, the teacher scans and projects, treating the QR as a quick way to surface a video without typing a long URL.
Yes. A QR is just a URL — whoever scans it gets the same destination. Many teachers print a single QR on the welcome packet that links to the class blog, calendar, and contact form for both kids and families.
For sensitive grade or attendance info, link the QR to a login page rather than a public document.
URL QRs pointing at short pages with clues, riddles, or photo prompts. Use a different QR at each station and design them in distinct colours so students don't mix them up.
For language classes, pair each QR with an audio file (Spotify, SoundCloud, your own MP3 link) so students hear the prompt instead of reading it.
Questions? · hi@qrkong.com