Transform any topic into a hands-on classroom mission
Generate complete active learning experiences: debates, simulations, mock trials, with teacher guidance and print-ready materials.
Students go screen-free. The mission happens in the real world.
CBSE Learning Outcomes
The Method
Every mission follows four phases
A provocative question, image or video that hooks students and creates cognitive tension.
ScreenTeacher reads instructions, forms groups, and hands out printed materials.
Physical100% physical. Students debate, build, role-play, negotiate, and collaborate. This is the part where your classroom gets loud, and that’s exactly the point.
PhysicalGuided reflection, discussion questions, exit ticket, and bridge to next lesson.
ScreenReady to Use
Example missions
Pre-built, classroom-tested, and genuinely fun

Hammurabi on Trial: Justice or Tyranny?
Students prosecute and defend Hammurabi's Code in a full courtroom simulation with witnesses, attorneys, and a jury.

Was Athens Really a Democracy?
Students physically move to corners to debate whether a society where 85% can't vote deserves to be called a democracy.

The Columbian Exchange: A Trading Simulation
Five civilizations trade resources across three rounds — and discover that some exchanges come with devastating consequences.

The Neolithic Revolution: Progress or Disaster?
Pairs argue both sides of whether the shift to farming was humanity's greatest achievement — or its biggest mistake.

Who Built the Pyramids? A Document Mystery
Students analyze primary source clues — payroll records, graffiti, bones — to debunk the myth of slave labor and uncover the truth.

Rome vs. Han China: Empire Showdown
Expert groups master military, economy, technology, and governance — then teach their home group to compare two empires that never met.

Should Galileo Recant?
The Church vs. Science: students put Galileo on trial for heresy in a courtroom debate about truth, authority, and evidence.

The Black Death: Who Survives?
Students play as medieval villagers making survival decisions as plague sweeps through — and discover how pandemics reshape societies.

Silk Road Stations: What Traveled Besides Goods?
Six stations explore religion, disease, technology, art, food, and language that spread along history's most famous trade route.

Genghis Khan: Destroyer or Connector?
Students take a stand on the Mongol legacy — then hear arguments that challenge their position and decide whether to switch corners.

The Renaissance Art Gallery
Groups create displays comparing medieval and Renaissance art — then rotate, leave sticky-note critiques, and debate what changed.

Was the Reformation About Faith or Power?
Pairs argue that Luther's break was theological, then switch sides and argue it was political — before writing a consensus statement.

Mansa Musa's Hajj: Mapping an Empire's Wealth
Students trace Musa's journey using maps, accounts, and gold records to understand why Mali was the richest empire on Earth.

The Caste System: Social Structure or Oppression?
Inner and outer circles debate whether the caste system was a functional social order or an unjust hierarchy — using primary sources.

Feudalism: A Fair Deal?
Students are assigned roles — king, lords, knights, serfs — and negotiate obligations across three rounds of medieval crises.

Connecting the Ancient World
Students arrange hexagons for key concepts — iron, monotheism, democracy, the wheel — and debate which connections matter most.

Gold, God, or Glory: Why Did Europe Explore?
Students choose the primary motive for European exploration — then defend their position against three competing arguments.

The Crusades: Holy War or Trade Mission?
Was it about reclaiming Jerusalem or opening trade routes? Pairs argue both sides before finding the nuanced truth in between.

Hammurabi on Trial: Justice or Tyranny?
Students prosecute and defend Hammurabi's Code in a full courtroom simulation with witnesses, attorneys, and a jury.

Was Athens Really a Democracy?
Students physically move to corners to debate whether a society where 85% can't vote deserves to be called a democracy.

The Columbian Exchange: A Trading Simulation
Five civilizations trade resources across three rounds — and discover that some exchanges come with devastating consequences.

The Neolithic Revolution: Progress or Disaster?
Pairs argue both sides of whether the shift to farming was humanity's greatest achievement — or its biggest mistake.

Who Built the Pyramids? A Document Mystery
Students analyze primary source clues — payroll records, graffiti, bones — to debunk the myth of slave labor and uncover the truth.

Rome vs. Han China: Empire Showdown
Expert groups master military, economy, technology, and governance — then teach their home group to compare two empires that never met.

Should Galileo Recant?
The Church vs. Science: students put Galileo on trial for heresy in a courtroom debate about truth, authority, and evidence.

The Black Death: Who Survives?
Students play as medieval villagers making survival decisions as plague sweeps through — and discover how pandemics reshape societies.

Silk Road Stations: What Traveled Besides Goods?
Six stations explore religion, disease, technology, art, food, and language that spread along history's most famous trade route.

Genghis Khan: Destroyer or Connector?
Students take a stand on the Mongol legacy — then hear arguments that challenge their position and decide whether to switch corners.

The Renaissance Art Gallery
Groups create displays comparing medieval and Renaissance art — then rotate, leave sticky-note critiques, and debate what changed.

Was the Reformation About Faith or Power?
Pairs argue that Luther's break was theological, then switch sides and argue it was political — before writing a consensus statement.

Mansa Musa's Hajj: Mapping an Empire's Wealth
Students trace Musa's journey using maps, accounts, and gold records to understand why Mali was the richest empire on Earth.

The Caste System: Social Structure or Oppression?
Inner and outer circles debate whether the caste system was a functional social order or an unjust hierarchy — using primary sources.

Feudalism: A Fair Deal?
Students are assigned roles — king, lords, knights, serfs — and negotiate obligations across three rounds of medieval crises.

Connecting the Ancient World
Students arrange hexagons for key concepts — iron, monotheism, democracy, the wheel — and debate which connections matter most.

Gold, God, or Glory: Why Did Europe Explore?
Students choose the primary motive for European exploration — then defend their position against three competing arguments.

The Crusades: Holy War or Trade Mission?
Was it about reclaiming Jerusalem or opening trade routes? Pairs argue both sides before finding the nuanced truth in between.
Proven Frameworks
48 active learning methodologies
Click any methodology to see how it transforms a classroom
Socratic Seminar
A structured, student-led discussion method in which learners use open-ended questioning and textual evidence to collaboratively analyse complex ideas — aligning directly with NEP 2020's emphasis on critical thinking and competency-based learning.
The Socratic Seminar places student dialogue at the centre of the learning experience. Rather than the teacher transmitting content, a small group of students — typically 10 to 12 in a Fishbowl format suited to Indian class sizes of 35 to 50 — discuss an open-ended question drawn from a shared NCERT, ICSE, or state board text. The facilitator remains silent, and students must support every claim with evidence from the passage. This trains the inference, analytical reading, and evidence-based argumentation skills increasingly tested in CBSE and ICSE competency-based board questions, while building the collaborative dialogue and respectful disagreement norms central to NEP 2020's vision of holistic education.
Fishbowl arrangement — 10 to 12 chairs in an inner circle, remaining students in an outer ring with observation worksheets. Requires a classroom where desks can be moved to the perimeter; can be adapted for fixed-bench classrooms by designating a front discussion area with the teacher's platform cleared.
- •Printed or photocopied extract from NCERT, ICSE prescribed text, or state board reader (1 to 3 pages)
- •Printed discussion prompt cards with sentence starters and seminar norms in English (bilingual versions recommended for regional-medium schools)
- •Observation worksheet for outer-circle students tracking evidence citations and peer-to-peer discussion moves
- •Exit ticket aligned to board exam analytical question formats
Beyond Academics
Every mission builds SEL skills
Active learning naturally develops social and emotional competencies: empathy, self-regulation, collaboration, and ethical reasoning. Every Flip mission maps to specific CASEL skills.
Learn about SEL integrationReady to make your classroom the best part of the day?
Pick a topic, choose a methodology, and generate a classroom-ready mission in seconds.
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