Teach with interactive classroom activities

Skyrocket your students' engagement with role-playing activities that fit your classroom's curriculum.

Example: How students roleplay together

You're: Caesar's ghost 👻

With: Brutus 🗡️

Caesar's ghost 👻omg. you hit me

Brutus 🗡️yes i did

Caesar's ghost 👻so NOT cool 😤😤

Caesar's ghost 👻dude. we were friends

Brutus 🗡️sorry Caesar.

Brutus 🗡️rome cant have a king

Caesar's ghost 👻dude. i was GREAT for rome.

Brutus 🗡️ is typing.

Talk as Caesar's ghost 👻 ...

How It Works

Set up in minutes. Students learn through conversation.

Step 1

Create an Activity

Pick characters or historical figures from the unit you are currently teaching.

Step 2

Share the Join Code

Chaverola generates a simple code for the activity. Students enter it to join instantly.

Step 3

Students Chat in Character

Each student gets a character and gets paired with a classmate. Their roleplay chat shows you what they understand.

Teacher View

You see Sam and Rachel's real names. They only see Caesar and Brutus.

Every message shows each student's real name next to their assigned character. So while Sam is going full Caesar and Rachel is pushing back as Brutus, you always know exactly who said what.

🎭 The mystery that keeps students engaged

Students don't know who they're chatting with during the activity. When it ends, Chaverola reveals who each student was paired with, creating a fun "wait, that was you?" moment.

Get a full copy after every activity

When the activity ends, Chaverola emails you a complete copy of every student chat — ready for grading, feedback, or assessment.

sam g → Caesar's ghost 👻

rachel f → Brutus 🗡️

(sam g) Caesar's ghost 👻: dude. I was GREAT for rome.

(sam g) Caesar's ghost 👻: MAKE ROME GREAT AGAIN!!!

(rachel f) Brutus 🗡️: bro you were one toga away from a crown

(sam g) Caesar's ghost 👻: fake news

(sam g) Caesar's ghost 👻: the ppl loved me

(rachel f) Brutus 🗡️: yeah and the senate was panicking

(sam g) Caesar's ghost 👻: the senate invents reasons to be scared

(sam g) Caesar's ghost 👻 is typing.

Moshe Siegel
Moshe Siegel

How Chaverola came about

I'm Moshe, and I volunteer in the English department at a high school in Beit Shemesh, Israel.

I've always loved multiplayer games like Warcraft and Brawl Stars, where people are active, curious, and fully inside the experience. That made me wonder: could a classroom activity feel that alive?

I wanted to create a multiplayer learning activity for students, the kind of game I would have loved to play in high school, where students step into characters, talk with classmates, and experience what they're studying in a more active and memorable way.

The name Chaverola comes from two words: Chaver, the Hebrew word for friend, and Crayola, a name that represents creativity and imagination. That's what Chaverola is meant to be: a friendly, creative space where students bring characters to life together.

If you have questions, ideas, or just want to say hi, I'd love to hear from you.

Sincerely,

Moshe Siegel

siegel.moshes@gmail.com