Name Spinner
- Spin for a world religion
World Religion Picker — Social Studies
Spin a random world religion for comparative religion units and research projects. Neutral, educational framing — ten traditions ready to spin in class.

Study traditions with respect and primary sources
social studies teachers often lose minutes debating the next world religion while the group waits. A world religion wheel assigns Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and the rest of the list, in one visible spin so the pick feels fair rather than leader-chosen.
This wheel lists 10 options with equal odds when each appears once. Use it for comparative religion and culture units. Each segment occupies one slice — say that once if someone claims the wheel "always lands" on the same item; short runs can cluster without rigging.
Classrooms project the embed during comparative religion and culture units. Families spin on a tablet before committing to plans. Teams screenshot the result for async members who join late — same outcome, no re-spin argument.
Paste custom entries on the Name Spinner homepage when the default list is too narrow for your cohort. Remove items that violate policy or allergies before you spin — students trust the wheel only when the list matches reality.
Substitute plans: Leave a printed QR to this guide so coverage teachers run the same comparative religion and culture units without improvising. Counselors and clubs use the spin for low-stakes variety when repetition breeds disengagement.
After-school programs spin once at check-in so staff spend zero minutes negotiating the opening activity. Professional development teams use the same pattern for workshop formats — the wheel picks structure, the facilitator keeps psychological safety.
Use language picker for liturgical language context. Currency picker when discussing pilgrimage economies — always cite reputable sources.
Comparative religion workflow
Step 1: Spin once; read the result aloud. Step 2: Confirm any safety or access rules for the pick. Step 3: Run the activity, lesson, or research block. Step 4: Debrief briefly — what surprised you?
Remove options that do not fit your space, budget, or policy on the homepage before projecting. Re-spins are for equipment failure or absent materials — not because the group hoped for a different outcome. Document that rule in your syllabus or meeting norms.
Equity: Offer opt-out paths and seated or remote variants when the landed pick assumes mobility, spending, or disclosure. Accessibility: Describe the spin result in chat for screen-reader users when facilitating hybrid sessions.
Time boxes: Announce a hard stop before the spin so the activity fits your block. Documentation: Screenshot or copy the homepage share link when the same list will repeat weekly — saves rebuild time.

Traditions on this wheel
- Christianity — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Islam — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Hinduism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Buddhism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Judaism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Sikhism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Jainism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Shintoism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Taoism — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
- Baháʼí — fair equal slot on this world religion wheel
Illustrative world religion wheel notes
10
Items on wheel
Customize on homepage
Yes
Equal odds
One slot per world religion on this embed
~5 min
Typical time saved
Illustrative estimate vs group debate
Illustrative example only — rounded slot counts.

Fairness and house rules
Equal odds per item each spin when each appears once on the wheel. Weighted tickets and custom lists live on the homepage when you need raffle-style odds — this embed stays one segment per name for transparency.
If a landed pick is unsafe or off-limits today, delete it from the list before re-spinning — do not nudge the wheel informally. Trust: Explain once how Name Spinner picks the winner before animation; link how fair is random name picker for skeptical groups.
Privacy: Do not force personal stories tied to the spin result. Inclusion: Translate instructions when needed; the spin is fair only if everyone understands the task.
For recurring sessions, rotate who presses spin so no single student owns the button. Audit: Log odd repeats over twenty spins as a math lesson on random clustering — not evidence of a broken wheel.
Sample session outline
Day 1
Spin; establish respect norms and vocabulary.
Day 2
Research from library databases, not random blogs.
Day 3
Present facts; distinguish belief vs cultural practice.
“Random world religion picks keep facilitation fair — the wheel chooses, you hold the safety boundaries.”
| Item | Setup tip |
|---|---|
| Buddhism | Four Noble Truths overview, meditation practice note |
| Islam | Five pillars summary, call to prayer audio |
| Hinduism | Dharma, diverse practices, festival example |
| Judaism | Shabbat, Torah scroll handling respect |
Tips for facilitators
When Buddhism, Judaism, Sikhism appear often in short sessions, treat it as normal variance — not a reason to distrust the tool. Over a semester, every world religion on the wheel should get airtime if you spin regularly without trimming the list mid-year.
Projection: Fullscreen the homepage embed so the spin animation is visible; hidden spins feel rigged to students who cannot see the landing. Audio: In loud gyms or cafeterias, announce the result twice or flash it on a second monitor.
Differentiation: Offer a written opt-in task tied to the same ${spec.topicLabel} for students who need quiet work. Extension: Fast finishers research one fun fact about the landed item and teach back in thirty seconds.
Cross-linking: Bookmark this guide and the ${spec.hubLabel} hub for substitute folders. Assessment: Grade participation and reflection, not whether students liked the random outcome — the wheel assigns; learners respond.
Parent communication: Send the homepage link before family events so guardians preview the list. Data privacy: No accounts required — lists stay on device unless you choose to share a URL.
Common questions
Can I edit the list? Yes — use the homepage to add, remove, or reorder world religion options, then share the encoded link.
Is every spin independent? Yes — previous results do not change the next odds when segments are equal.
Embed in slides? Link to this guide or paste the homepage URL after customizing your list.
Classroom mode? Switch to Classroom mode on the homepage for kid-safe announcer copy when presenting.
Share the result? Copy the winner card or homepage link after customizing for your group.
Too many options? Trim to ten focused entries — shorter lists spin faster and stay readable on projectors.
Align with district standards
Paste traditions your standards require; add local faith communities for guest speakers.
Create a custom world religion wheel →Build your own spinner wheel
Paste any list, import a class roster, save history, and share a link — free on the Name Spinner homepage. No account required.
Open full Name Spinner →Related guides

Fantasy Creature Picker — Creative Writing
Spin a random fantasy creature for story prompts, D&D clubs, and art class. Dragon, unicorn, phoenix, and more — ten creatures ready to spin.
In-page spinner
By Name Spinner

Greek God Picker Wheel — Mythology Unit
Spin a random Greek god for mythology units, creative writing, and art history. Zeus, Athena, Poseidon, and more — ten deities ready to spin.
In-page spinner
By Name Spinner

Random Currency Picker — Spin the Wheel
Pick a random world currency with a free spinner wheel. Economics warm-ups, exchange-rate demos, and trivia — ten major currencies ready to spin.
In-page spinner
By Name Spinner

Random Zodiac Sign Picker — Spin the Wheel
Pick a random zodiac sign with a free spinner wheel. Party icebreakers, creative writing, and culture units — all twelve signs ready to spin.
In-page spinner
By Name Spinner