A new tool just launched on the site: a free true or false generator. Paste any text — a chapter, a news article, a short reading passage — and get a ready-to-use set of true or false statements with the correct answers. No account, no setup, no hassle.
You paste a short text (up to 3,500 characters), choose how many statements you want and at which difficulty level. The tool then reads the text and writes statements that are clearly true or clearly false based on what is in it.
What you get back:
To give an idea of what the output looks like, here’s a short source text:
The Eiffel Tower was completed in 1889 for the World’s Fair in Paris. Designed by engineer Gustave Eiffel, it stands 330 metres tall and was the tallest man-made structure in the world for 41 years. Today, around seven million people visit it every year.
The generator turns this into something like:
True or false questions are one of the fastest ways to check if pupils have actually read and understood a text. Instead of writing the statements yourself — which always takes longer than you would think — you let the generator do the first pass. You then tweak whatever does not quite fit and you have a ready exercise in a few minutes. It works equally well for reading comprehension, history facts, science topics, language lessons or current events.
The three levels behave differently. Easy sticks close to the wording of the source text — facts are stated almost as they appear, so pupils only need to recognise them. Medium rephrases ideas, so pupils have to match a statement to the underlying meaning rather than the exact wording. Hard introduces subtle distinctions: small swaps in numbers, dates or relationships that require careful reading. Match the level to your group, or mix them in one worksheet.
Factual texts give the strongest results: history passages, science explanations, biographies, geography snippets, simple news articles. Anything with concrete claims — names, dates, numbers, cause-and-effect — gives the generator clear material to work with. Opinion pieces, abstract reflections or very short fragments are harder, because there are fewer verifiable facts to turn into statements. As a rule of thumb: if a pupil could underline the key facts in the text with a pencil, the generator can turn them into a good worksheet.
The generator runs without an account and is completely free to use. It is also available in nine languages across our network — English, Dutch, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Norwegian and Swedish — so the statements come back in the same language as the source text.
If a single statement is not quite right, just edit it directly in the result list before downloading — often that is faster than regenerating the whole set. And if the result feels too easy, switch to Hard and generate again: the same text usually produces noticeably trickier statements at the higher level.