← Blog

How to Turn Text Into a Quiz (Step by Step)

2026/06/20

Click to upload or drag and drop

PDF, DOCX, PPTX, TXT, JPG, JPEG, PNG, HEIC, ODP, ODT, BMP, or TIFF

up to 20MB

Please wait, your quiz is being created...

Uploading...

To turn text into a quiz, save the text as a file, upload it to an AI quiz generator, set how many questions you want, and let the tool write questions with an answer key from the content. You then edit anything that needs fixing and export the quiz to PDF or Word. The whole process takes a couple of minutes and works with an article, a chapter, notes, a report, or a transcript.

That is the short version. Below is the full method, including how to get a clean read from your text, how many questions to ask, and how to fix the common problems people hit the first time.

How do I turn text into a quiz?

Put your text into a file, upload it, and generate. Most quiz tools read from a document rather than a paste box, so the reliable path is to drop your writing into a PDF, a Word file, or a plain text file first. Upload that file to a text to quiz generator, choose the number of questions and the types you want, and the AI reads the text, pulls out the key terms and facts, and drafts the quiz with the correct answers marked. Review the draft, change anything you do not like, and export.

The reason a file works better than a raw paste is that long passages stay intact, formatting like headings and lists survives, and you can reuse the same source later without copying it again.

Can AI generate a quiz from text?

Yes. An AI reads the text the same way a person skims for the important parts: it identifies definitions, names, dates, processes, and the main arguments, then writes questions that test those points. Good tools generate multiple choice, true or false, fill in the blank, and short answer questions, and they mark the right answer on each one. The questions come from your text, not from the model's general knowledge, so the quiz stays on topic instead of drifting into trivia the passage never mentioned.

Step by step: from a block of text to a finished quiz

Here is the workflow that gives the cleanest result every time.

1. Get the text into a file. If you already have a PDF or Word document, you are set. If your text lives on a webpage or in an email, paste it into a blank document and save it. If the only copy is a photo or a scan, run it through an OCR document extraction tool first so the words become real, selectable text the quiz generator can read.

2. Trim the noise. Delete page headers, footers, reference lists, and long block quotes you do not want quizzed. The cleaner the source, the more focused the questions.

3. Upload and set the options. Choose how many questions you want and which types. For a quick comprehension check, five to ten multiple choice questions is plenty. For a study session or a class quiz, fifteen to twenty mixed questions cover more ground.

4. Generate and read the draft. The AI returns a full quiz in seconds with the answer key built in. Read each question against the source to confirm it is fair and accurate.

5. Edit, then export. Rewrite weak questions, swap a distractor that gives the answer away, and delete anything off target. Then export to PDF or Word to print, assign, or study from.

How much text do I need to make a quiz?

A single solid paragraph is enough for a few questions, but you get better coverage from a full section or chapter. As a rough guide, a dense page of text supports ten to twenty good questions, while a short passage gives five or fewer. If you feed in a very long document, set a higher question count so the quiz samples the whole thing rather than just the opening pages. You control the number before generating, so you can match the quiz length to how much you actually want to test.

What kinds of text work best?

Anything with clear, organized writing produces a strong quiz. Articles and blog posts, textbook chapters, lecture and class notes, company policies and handbooks, research reports, and meeting or lecture transcripts all convert well. Structured text with headings and defined terms gives the AI obvious anchors for questions. Very short marketing copy or a list of links gives it little to work with, so combine thin sources into one document before generating.

How do I make the questions harder or easier?

Two levers control difficulty. First, the question type: multiple choice and true or false are easier because the answer is on the screen, while fill in the blank and short answer force recall. Second, the wording: questions that ask you to apply or compare ideas are harder than questions that ask you to recognize a definition. Generate a mixed draft, then edit the few questions you want to push harder. If you need a longer graded version with a time limit, build it with the online test maker instead of a quick quiz.

Can I turn an article I wrote into a quiz?

Yes, and it is a smart way to add engagement to content. Save your article as a file, generate a short quiz from it, and embed or share the quiz so readers can test what they learned. Writers and marketers often pair this with broader content work: if you want the underlying articles to actually get found, an AI SEO agent that writes and optimizes blog content handles the publishing side while the quiz handles the engagement side.

Do I have to write the answer key myself?

No. The generator marks the correct answer on every question as it writes the quiz, and the key exports with the document. That is the biggest time saver compared with writing questions by hand, where building and double checking the key usually takes longer than writing the questions. You only touch the key if you edit a question, and even then you just confirm the right option is still marked.

Turn your text into a quiz now

The fastest path from a block of writing to a working quiz is to let an AI read the text and draft the questions, then spend two minutes editing. Start with the text to quiz generator to convert an article, chapter, or set of notes, or use the PDF to quiz tool if your source is already a PDF. Either way you get an editable quiz with an answer key you can export and use straight away.