How to Share a Blooket Question Set

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How to share a Blooket question set with your teaching team should be easier than it is, but once you know the tricks, it’s simple.

I wanted to share my killer geometry review with the other math teachers in my department.

Spent 20 minutes trying to figure it out before I found the actual share button.

Why Share Question Sets

Collaboration makes everyone’s job easier.

When you share sets:

  • Save colleagues hours of prep time
  • Maintain consistency across departments
  • Get feedback and improvements from other teachers
  • Build professional relationships

I share every quality set I create. Teaching shouldn’t be a solo sport.

Two Ways to Share

You’ve got two main options:

Make the set public (anyone can find it).

Share a direct link (only people with the link can access it).

I use direct links for department sharing and public for broader distribution.

Sharing via Direct Link

Open the question set you want to share.

Click the three-dot menu or “Share” button.

Select “Copy Link” or “Get Shareable Link.”

Paste that link in an email, Slack message, or wherever you communicate with colleagues.

What Recipients See

When someone clicks your shared link, they see your complete question set.

They can preview all questions and answers.

They can’t edit YOUR set, but they can copy it to their own library.

Think of it like sharing a Google Doc with “view only” permissions.

Making Sets Public for Broader Sharing

Want the whole Blooket community to access your set?

Go to settings and make the set public.

Now anyone searching in Discover can find and copy your content.

I do this with my best, most polished sets.

Sharing Within Your School

Most schools have a shared drive or communication platform.

Drop your Blooket share links in:

  • Department folders
  • Staff Slack channels
  • Team planning documents
  • Weekly email digests

One teacher in my building created a “Blooket Library” spreadsheet with everyone’s shared links.

Game changer for our school.

Organizing Shared Content

When sharing multiple sets, give context:

“Here’s my Unit 3 review (25 questions, medium difficulty, tested with all my classes).”

Better than just dropping a naked link with no explanation.

Help your colleagues understand what they’re getting.

Sharing Modified Versions

Copied a set and customized it for your class?

Share both the original AND your modified version.

Let colleagues choose which works better for their students.

I always note what changes I made: “removed 5 hardest questions for my struggling learners.”

Collaborating on Set Creation

Here’s a workflow my team uses:

One teacher creates a base set and shares the link.

Each teacher copies it and adds 3-5 questions from their own resources.

We merge the best versions into one comprehensive set.

Everyone contributes, everyone benefits.

Receiving Shared Sets

When someone shares a set with you:

Click the link to preview it.

Hit “Copy” if you want your own editable version.

Never edit someone else’s set directly (you can’t anyway, but still).

Always copy it to your library first.

Tracking What You’ve Shared

Keep a simple document listing:

  • Set names you’ve shared
  • Who you shared with
  • Date shared
  • Any feedback received

Helps you remember what’s out there and who’s using your content.

Getting Credit for Shared Content

If you’re sharing publicly, your name stays attached as the creator.

But with direct links, there’s no formal attribution system.

Trust that good teachers appreciate and acknowledge quality content.

I’ve had colleagues mention my sets in faculty meetings—that’s recognition enough.

Updating Shared Sets

Made improvements to a set after sharing it?

Reshare the updated link with a note: “Updated version with better answer choices.”

People who copied the old version won’t see changes automatically.

They’ll need to copy the new version if they want updates.

Sharing Across Districts

Connect with teachers in other districts through Facebook groups or Reddit.

Share your Blooket links there.

I’ve swapped resources with teachers in three different states.

Expanded my content library massively.

Privacy Considerations

Before sharing:

Remove any student names, inside jokes, or school-specific references.

Make sure all content is appropriate for public viewing.

Double-check answer accuracy—nothing worse than sharing incorrect information.

I caught a wrong answer once right before sharing. Close call.

FAQ

Can people edit my set if I share the link?

No, they can only view and copy it. Your original remains untouched.

How many people can I share a link with?

Unlimited. Share with your whole district if you want.

Do shared links expire?

No, Blooket share links remain active indefinitely unless you delete the set.

Can I see who accessed my shared link?

No, Blooket doesn’t provide analytics on link clicks or copies.