Connect students and parents to assignments, forms, and school info with a quick scan.
Create your free QR codeSchools send a lot of information home — schedules, forms, newsletters, event details. Most of it ends up crumpled at the bottom of a backpack. A QR code on a single sheet gets parents to the right page on their phone before they leave the parking lot.
Teachers print QR codes on worksheets that link to video tutorials or interactive exercises. A fifth grader scanning a code to watch a long-division walkthrough is more engaged than one staring at a static textbook page. It works for reading lists, science experiment videos, and foreign language pronunciation guides too.
Post QR codes in the front office linking to enrollment forms. Put one on the gym door for sports sign-ups. Stick another in the cafeteria linking to the monthly lunch menu. Each code handles one task, so there is no confusion about where it leads.
Test every code before printing a batch. Use dynamic QR codes so you can swap the destination when a form link changes mid-semester. Laminate anything posted in a hallway — kids are not gentle. And keep a shortlink alternative for the rare student without a camera phone.
Point to a class website, Google Form, assignment page, or event registration. One QR code per destination keeps things clear.
Add your school logo and colors. Pick a frame with text like 'Scan to sign up' or 'Scan for homework.'
Download as PNG or SVG. Print on handouts, hallway posters, report cards, or laminated table cards in the library.
Link to digital forms instead of printing stacks of permission slips and flyers. One QR code on a bulletin board does the job of 300 handouts.
Parents scan a code on the pickup line poster and land on the school calendar or emergency update page in seconds.
Students scan a code on a worksheet and jump to a video explanation or practice quiz. It bridges the gap between print and digital without extra steps.
Print QR codes on worksheets or posters that link to videos, interactive quizzes, or supplementary reading. Students scan with a tablet or phone and get straight to the resource without typing a long URL.
Yes, as long as you control the destination URL. Link only to school-approved resources. If you use a dynamic QR code, you can change or disable the link at any time.
They can. Link a QR code to a Google Form or digital signature tool. Parents scan, fill out the form on their phone, and submit — no paper to lose in a backpack.
For worksheets, 1 inch square is enough. For hallway posters scanned from a few feet away, print at least 4 inches square so every phone camera picks it up easily.
Dynamic QR codes log total scans, dates, and device types. This tells you whether parents are actually reading that newsletter or event flyer.
Create your custom QR code in seconds. Free forever, no account needed.
Create your free QR code