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Enter Your Topic or Subject
Type any topic — "photosynthesis," "World War II causes," or "fractions." No need to upload a file or paste a textbook chapter. Just describe what you want to test.
Misconception checks
The fastest way to test what students actually understand — not just what they can guess. Generate true, false, and partial-truth statements on any topic in seconds. No uploads, no account, no limits.
Fully True Statements
Confirms correct understanding
Fully False Statements
Tests recognition of clear errors
Partial-Truth Statements
Catches students who only half-understand
💡 Pro tip: Add "with justification prompts" to your request — students must explain WHY, turning T/F into a higher-order thinking task.
How it works
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Type any topic — "photosynthesis," "World War II causes," or "fractions." No need to upload a file or paste a textbook chapter. Just describe what you want to test.
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Select a mix of fully true, fully false, and partial-truth statements. Set difficulty from Easy facts to Hard nuanced statements that require deep understanding.
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Get a complete set of T/F questions with answer key in seconds. Add justification prompts with one click. Export to PDF for printing or Word for editing.
Statement examples
Good T/F questions do more than ask for a guess. These three examples show how fully true, fully false, and partial-truth statements reveal different kinds of understanding.
Statement
The human heart has four chambers.
Answer
TRUE ✅
Why it works
Confirms a core anatomical fact. Students who answer FALSE reveal a fundamental gap in basic biology knowledge.
Statement
The First World War began in 1918.
Answer
FALSE ❌
Correct fact
WWI began in 1914, not 1918.
Why it works
1918 is the year WWI ended — a classic date confusion trap.
Statement
Plants produce oxygen during photosynthesis and use it for all their energy needs.
Answer
FALSE ⚠️
Correct fact
Plants do produce oxygen during photosynthesis, but they also use cellular respiration — not just photosynthesis — for energy.
Why it works
Students who only half-understand photosynthesis will mark this TRUE.
Use cases
Use true or false questions when speed, diagnosis, and low-friction review matter more than long-form assessment.
Warm-ups
Generate a 5-question T/F set for the start of class. Takes students 3 minutes to complete, tells you who did the reading, and shows which concepts need re-teaching before you move on.
Diagnosis
Use partial-truth statements to pinpoint exactly which part of a concept students misunderstand. Wrong answers become diagnostic data, not just lost points.
Reading checks
Generate T/F statements from a reading passage topic. Students who read carefully answer quickly; students who did not are revealed without hand-writing comprehension questions.
Unit progress
Use the same T/F set before and after a unit to measure which misconceptions were corrected. It is a clear measure of learning progress with zero extra grading time.
Question craft
The strongest T/F questions balance answer ratios, avoid giveaway wording, target real misconceptions, and ask students to justify their reasoning.
A quiz with 8 TRUE and 2 FALSE answers teaches students to guess TRUE by default. Aim for a roughly 50/50 split, and vary the pattern so students can't predict the answer from position. The generator does this automatically, but always review the final distribution before printing.
Words like "always," "never," "all," and "none" are almost always false in science and history. Experienced students know to mark any statement with "always" as FALSE without reading it. Replace with "typically," "in most cases," or "under standard conditions" to force real reading.
"The sun revolves around the Earth" is too obviously false to be useful. "The sun is the largest object in the universe" targets a real misconception: students confuse "largest in our solar system" with "largest in the universe." The best false statements are ones that a student who half-understands the topic would mark TRUE.
A partial-truth statement contains one correct clause and one incorrect clause: "Photosynthesis produces oxygen AND is the only process plants use for energy." Students must evaluate every part of the statement, not just recognize a keyword. This is the single most effective upgrade you can make to a T/F quiz.
"True or False — and explain your reasoning in one sentence." This one addition transforms T/F from a 50/50 guessing game into a genuine comprehension check. Students who guessed correctly can no longer hide behind a right answer. Use this format for any T/F quiz that counts toward a grade.
FAQ
These answers cover free use, no-upload generation, partial-truth statements, justification prompts, supported subjects, and export options.
Yes. No account, no subscription, no daily limits. Generate as many true or false question sets as you need for any subject, grade level, or topic.
No. Unlike most AI quiz tools that require you to upload a document or paste a reading passage, this generator creates questions from any topic you type. Just enter a subject and topic — no uploads needed.
A partial-truth statement contains one correct element and one incorrect element in the same sentence. Students must evaluate the entire statement — not just recognize a keyword — to answer correctly. Partial-truth statements are the most effective type of T/F question for testing genuine understanding rather than surface recall.
Yes. Specify "with justification prompts" in your request and the generator will add "Explain your answer" or "If false, rewrite the statement to make it true" to each question. This transforms T/F from a recognition task into a higher-order thinking exercise.
All subjects and all grade levels — from elementary science and history to high school AP courses and university-level content. Specify the grade level in your request to calibrate vocabulary and complexity.
Yes. Export a student version with blank T/F answer spaces and a teacher version with answer key and explanations as PDF for printing or Word for editing.
True or false questions are faster to answer and faster to grade, making them ideal for low-stakes formative checks, warm-ups, and exit tickets. When combined with justification prompts, they require the same depth of thinking as multiple choice — in half the time.
More generators
Combine T/F misconception checks with other question formats, teacher workflows, or subject-specific quiz pages.