1891 · A sign-first product
Multiple-choice, answered by fingerspelling.
A quiz where the student signs A, B, C, or D to the camera instead of clicking. The question is shown visually, the answer is signed, and the loop stays in the language the lesson was taught in. Runs in a browser tab — embed it anywhere, or have the studio build the whole thing for you.
Keyboard fallback by design. Captions on. No install.
How it works
A prompt, four choices, and a fingerspelled answer.
The most common assessment format on earth — with the response channel kept in sign.
A question, four choices
Each question shows a prompt and four labeled choices — A, B, C, D — in plain language at a reading level that fits the audience.
Sign your answer
The camera reads your signing; you fingerspell the letter — A, B, C, or D. A hold-to-confirm window keeps a half-formed letter from counting. The recognizer is trained on Deaf-signed handshapes.
Score, and pass it back
At the end, the student sees a score. An embedded quiz can post that score back to the host page or your gradebook.
Try it right here
Sign A, B, C, or D, and watch it score.
Your camera turns on only when you press start — and off the moment you close it.
How to engage
Two doors. Pick the one that fits.
Door 1 · Embed it yourself
Build a quiz from a simple form, then drop the embed on any page — your class site, an exhibit microsite, a course module. Free for short quizzes; a subscription unlocks longer quizzes, branded themes, and score export.
<iframe src="…/embed/visual-quiz/ID" allow="camera" title="Visual Quiz"></iframe>
Door 2 · A Quiz Lab build
The studio scopes the content, the visual treatment, and the integration — your illustrations, your exhibit photography, your gradebook or kiosk — builds the quiz, sets up the embed, and maintains it. The right door when you want a quiz that looks like part of your thing.
Bespoke · studio-built · maintained for youWhat makes it different
The response channel stays in sign.
If the lesson was in ASL, the test should be too
A multiple-choice quiz is almost always delivered in a way that treats the response channel as an afterthought — click, tap, type. Visual Quiz closes that gap: the question is visual, the answer is signed, and the assessment stays in the language the learning happened in.
Access is the floor, not a feature ✦
The whole experience is keyboard-fallback by design — a student without a working camera takes the same quiz by pressing A through D. Captions are on by default for any audio, and the quiz runs in the browser with no server-side processing of the student's video.
Embed anywhereWhy it matters
Keep the answer in the language the lesson was in.
For Deaf learners, the gap between a signed lesson and a clicked answer is small but constant — a little reminder that the test wasn't built for you. Visual Quiz removes it. Designed by Deaf people; built for everyone answering.
Where it goes · from one classroom to a museum wall
One quiz engine, dropped wherever the learning happens.
The demo runs in a browser. In the world, Visual Quiz shows up two ways — embedded on a page you already have, or as a studio-built Quiz Lab installation scoped to a space or a broadcast.
Two ways it's delivered
The self-serve embed drops onto any page that allows a camera iframe — your class site, an exhibit microsite, a course module — and students answer by signing A, B, C, or D. Or the studio builds a Quiz Lab installation, scoped to a room, an exhibit, or a broadcast: your content, your visual treatment, your gradebook or kiosk, specced and built and maintained for you. Either way the response channel stays in sign, and the keyboard fallback is there by design.
Schools & districts
Embedded right in the LMS — students answer by signing A–D, and the score passes back to the gradebook.
Museums & exhibits
A Quiz Lab build wired into an exhibit kiosk — your photography, your copy, signed answers on the floor.
Broadcasters & events
A signed quiz as a segment or an audience interaction — built to fit the show and the room.
Any web page
Drop the self-serve embed anywhere that allows a camera iframe — no studio build required.
What a Quiz Lab build includes
- Content scoped to your curriculum, exhibit, or broadcast
- Your visual treatment — illustrations, photography, branding
- The integration: gradebook passback, kiosk, or host-page wiring
- The signed-answer recognizer, trained on Deaf-signed handshapes
- Keyboard fallback and captions on by default, by contract
- Set up, embedded, and maintained for you
Scoped per build · one-time + upkeep
Talk to us about a Quiz Lab buildOr try the demo first.
Pricing
Free at the small end. Built-around-you at the big end.
Five tiers map to how people actually buy — and a bespoke Quiz Lab build is conversation-led.
Free
$0
1 quiz, ≤10 questions, 1891-branded embed. Anonymous count only.
Creator
$29/mo
Solo teacher or creator. Unlimited quizzes, themed embed, CSV export.
Classroom
$149/mo
One classroom (≤35 seats). LTI 1.3, gradebook passback, white-label embed.
School
$1,499/yr
One building, unlimited classrooms. LTI to every course. Pay by PO.
District
from $7,500/yr
Multi-building. District-wide LTI + SSO + SIS sync. Dedicated support. Signed DPA.
Quiz Lab build
$12k–$60k one-time + $2,400/yr upkeep · a bespoke build around your curriculum, exhibit, or broadcast — scoped, built, set up, and maintained by the studio. Talk to us →
Not sure which tier? Try the demo first.
Questions
Good to know
How does a student answer?
They sign the letter — A, B, C, or D — to the camera. A hold-to-confirm window keeps a half-formed gesture from counting. The recognizer is trained on Deaf-signed handshapes.
What if there's no camera?
The quiz is keyboard-fallback by design — a student can press A through D and take the exact same quiz. Captions are on by default for any audio.
Where can I embed it?
Any page that allows an iframe with camera access — a class site, an exhibit microsite, a course module. Paid tiers add white-label themes, CSV export, and LTI grade passback.
What's a Quiz Lab build?
A bespoke engagement where the studio scopes the content, visual treatment, and integration, builds the whole quiz around your context, sets up the embed, and maintains it. $12k–$60k one-time plus $2,400/yr upkeep.
Does the video leave the browser?
No. The quiz runs in the browser with no server-side processing of the student's video. Scores can be posted back to your host page or gradebook; the camera feed stays local.
Is this part of Game Lab?
Visual Quiz is the flagship inside Game Lab and a product in its own right — the one that comes as both a self-serve embed and a bespoke build.