Recommended for upper elementary grades! A fun quiz for elementary school students where you can learn while enjoying yourself
Upper elementary school is a crucial stage of growth.
At this age, children become more curious and build deeper relationships with their friends.
They also start to enjoy learning and express their own ideas clearly.
So, we’ve gathered a selection of quizzes recommended for students in the upper grades of elementary school.
Through fun quizzes, they can deepen their knowledge and strengthen their thinking skills.
With quizzes on a variety of themes, you can spark children’s interest and help them feel the joy of learning.
Have fun taking on the challenges together with your friends!
- Recommended for upper grades! A fun, educational quiz for elementary school students
- For elementary school kids! Fun riddles recommended for the middle grades
- Recommended for lower grades! A fun, educational quiz for elementary school students
- Recommended for upper elementary school students! True-or-false quizzes that make you think
- Recommended for elementary school students! Trivia quiz you'll want to share once you know it
- Fun quizzes for elementary school kids: a collection of questions everyone can enjoy together
- Fun Quiz Collection Guaranteed to Stump and Delight Elementary School Kids
- A multiple-choice quiz with three options for upper elementary students. Questions you can enjoy between classes or at home.
- [For Elementary School Students] Recommended Riddle Collection
- Quiz for elementary school students: Easy! Fun! Question collection
- Quiz for junior high school students
- Funny quizzes for middle school students. Quizzes that can liven up a middle school setting.
- For elementary school kids! Fun and amusing riddles everyone can enjoy together
Recommended for middle elementary grades! Fun-and-learning quizzes for elementary school students (21–30)
A trick quiz at an elementary school level

We’re introducing trick questions at an elementary school level that make you go “Ah, I get it!” when you think them through.
Elementary school kids have flexible minds and genuinely enjoy quizzes, right? Sometimes, when a slightly tricky or trick question comes up, they get super excited and shout out the answer to teach everyone.
These quizzes have simple prompts—let’s try to find the answers.
If you think carefully, the answer might come to you intuitively in a flash.
If you can’t figure it out, asking for a simple hint is also recommended.
A riddle mainly written in hiragana

Once children start going to elementary school, their range of activities broadens compared to before, and all sorts of things begin to catch their eye.
They learn that a café is a place to drink coffee, that you can even buy a gravestone at a stone shop—things they didn’t understand before suddenly start to make sense, and I’m sure everything they see becomes fascinating and intriguing.
Learning words is just as much fun, so why not try some Hiragana riddles? They’re not only enjoyable but also help with Japanese language study—truly killing two birds with one stone.
Grown-ups, please join in the thinking, too!
Recommended for middle elementary grades! Fun-and-learning quizzes for elementary school students (31–40)
Ten Times Quiz
@kohataichannel Isn't this kinda hard? 😂10 Times QuizTranslation#KohaTaiChannel#fyp
♫ Original song – Kohatai Channel💛 – Kohatai Channel🎃🌈💫
Ask someone to say “pizza” ten times, then casually point to your elbow and ask, “What’s this?” They’ll answer “knee,” and that’s the classic ‘say it ten times’ quiz.
If you’re Japanese, you probably already know this one, but with new twists it’s still easy to get tripped up.
For example, have them say “dondon” ten times, then ask, “What’s the capital of France?” and they’ll say “London”—but the correct answer is Paris.
Or have them say “chandelier” ten times, then ask, “Who ate the apple?” and they’ll say “Cinderella,” when the answer is Snow White.
These ten-times quizzes really liven up break time!
trick question
@nazotoki_1 Trick Questions for Elementary School Kids [Easy] Part 5Translation#TrickQuestionTrick quizTrick questionTranslationTranslationtranslation
Silent Audio Source – Nashiko (Kaonashiko)
I really enjoy quiz shows and often watch them on TV.
How about you? I’m always impressed by the knowledge and quick thinking of Ujihara from Rozan and Takuji Izawa.
But the one I think is the most amazing is Kazlaser.
He’s so funny and yet so quick-witted… I wonder if a comedian’s brain and quiz skills are connected somehow.
If it’s Kazu, he could probably breeze through even slightly tricky trick questions.
The classic trick question for elementary school kids, both then and now, is probably: “What kind of pan can’t you eat, even though it’s called ‘pan’?” Everyone, try quizzing each other with your best trick questions and enjoy your lunch break!
Sea creatures, animals, and food riddles

Did you know that the mysterious sea creature known as the sea angel (Clione) varies in size depending on its habitat? In the English Channel, they grow to at most 1 cm, but in the Arctic Ocean they can reach as much as 8 cm.
By the way, the blue whale, considered the largest animal on Earth, is about 30 meters long.
While the creatures themselves are certainly amazing, the oceans that cradle them are truly magnificent.
Let’s make break time more fun with riddles about beloved sea-dwelling creatures.
If you mix in a few tricky, fiendish questions, it’ll be even more exciting!
5 riddles and brain teasers

There are moments in everyday life when wordplay just comes together, right? Like when you’re putting up posters in the classroom and someone says, “Too high, too high, lower,” and that makes you think of a pun like ‘Uesugi Kenshin’ (since ‘too high’ sounds like ‘Uesugi’).
Puns kind of feel similar to riddle-like brain teasers, don’t they? Here’s one: “It’s usually loud, but if you add one letter, it becomes quiet.
What is it?” The answer is ‘siren.’ Add a ‘t’ to the end and it becomes ‘silent,’ right? That rush you get when you solve a clever riddle is unbeatable!
A trick quiz that’s perfect for people who want to get irritated

I don’t know when this phrase started becoming popular, but more and more people have begun saying the slightly excuse-like, “Ah, so that’s what you meant.” Well, their frustrated reaction is amusing, so it doesn’t really bother me, but where did the phrase originally come from? If you know, please tell me! There are people who ask trick questions designed to annoy you—questions that make you want to say, “Ah, so that’s what you meant.” Maybe that kind of back-and-forth—like the classic “If you say this, I’ll say that”—can be fun if it’s between people who are really close.
The key to enjoying it is not to get worked up!


