Summer Math Games

June 17th, 2010

Get your game on with Math-Whizz this summer - the famous Whizz Adventure is now available!!

The challenge (if you’re up for it) - Help the Whizz Professor find his way out  the jungle. You’ll be racing the clock while solving math puzzles, exploring mazes and finding your way out of tricky situations.  Every level you complete unlocks a new piece of the story!

Log in to your Math-Whizz account to get started, or visit the Math-Whizz start page, create a free account and – if you like the look of Math-Whizz (we are confident you will) – sign up!  Complete a few lessons to earn credits so you can go on the adventure!

Access the summer adventure by clicking the postcard that lands on your Whizz Bedroom doormat. This will load the Summer Adventure experience.

Good luck!

The comic book story

The comic book story

The adventure map

The adventure map

Math-Whizz Tutoring on Better Northwest

April 22nd, 2010

Catch Math-Whizz’s very own Ben Keogh discussing online math tutoring with Penny LeGate on KIRO’s Better Northwest.

Check out the video on the Whizz Education YouTube page, or on the Better Northwest site.

If Ben has convinced you (and if not, why on earth not??), then get busy signing up to some personalized math tutoring.

Math and Chinese - a match made in the classroom

April 6th, 2010

The Seattle Times reports on a teaching method growing in popularity in the city’s elementary classrooms - teaching math with Chinese or Spanish.

Learning math with chinese - a successful approach in seattle classrooms

Learning math with chinese - a successful tactic in Seattle classrooms

The Seattle Times looks at some first grade students being taught basic math and science entirely in Mandarin Chinese, despite the children’s almost universal unfamiliarity with the language, in a seemingly successful attempt to boost both language and math skills.

At Beacon Hill International School, many students learn a second language along with their ABCs by spending half of each school day immersed in Mandarin Chinese or Spanish….

…In the afternoon, these students will move to another classroom to study reading, writing and social studies in English. But in the morning, they learn math and science in Mandarin, picking up the language through repetition and physical cues from Wu.

The approach seems to work despite (or even thanks to) the students’ split learning demands, relying on the basic qualities of elementary math and sciences, and the natural propensity of young children to acquire languages.

Beacon Hill International’s teachers hope the two-language approach will lead to academic gains for all their students, especially the school’s many immigrant children, who often fall behind academically while they still are learning English.

There’s research to bolster that hope. At John Stanford, for example, the school compared students in its first Spanish-English class with those who were one grade ahead and taught only in English. On the state’s fourth-grade test, the children in the Spanish-English program scored about 20 percentile points higher in reading and math.

And there are signs that the approach also helps boost confidence.

A similar approach at a Scottish school saw students’ math grades improving when they learned the subject.

You can sort of see how this might work when you look at kindergarten and first-grade math (including the material we teach in our online tutoring at Math-Whizz) - early math deals a lot in the language of number and basic techniques of describing the world in numeric terms.

Learning English or Chinese or Spanish words for numbers to ten, or comparative measures, might be somewhat irrelevant - the key is that the children form the concepts effectively and learn them well. There might be no better mnemonic hooks for basic math than sing-song Chinese and Spanish. There are likely many other reasons for this that I could guess at, but I’ll leave that to the experts.

These stories demonstrate that we underestimate children’s learning potential at our peril, and that sometimes stretching kids in novel ways has some surprising knock-on effects, and that is something we know well at Math-Whizz

San Diego or bust - Math-Whizz at NCTM Annual Meeting

January 29th, 2010

Whizz Education will be at the 2010 NCTM Annual Meeting, showcasing our online tutoring and classroom tools - come and see us!

(Math-Whizz at NCTM 2010)

(Whizz at NCTM)

Check us out on the at the exhibitors’ listing site, read up the interactive guide to the meeting, and book your ticket to sunny San Diego for April 21st through 24th.

See the some of the people who make Math-Whizz tick.

Booth 1028, Hall B2.


Gates digs online learning and the Math-Whizz method

January 26th, 2010

The day when Bill Gates publicly declares his enthusiasm for Math-Whizz will be a happy day indeed at our Seattle offices.

Until then we can content ourselves with the knowledge that one of the world’s most influential technocrats (and popular tweeters) understands just what Math-Whizz is doing with online learning, and why it works:

But online learning can be more than lectures. Another element involves presenting information in an interactive form, which can be used to find out what a student knows and doesn’t know. This makes it possible to tailor the learning session to the individual student.

…the online system can quickly diagnose what the students know, provide positive feedback, and make sure their time is spent really improving the conceptual areas where they are weak.

Microsoft founder Gates, who recently moved from the big MS to his equally huge Gates Foundation charity, is clearly keen on how technology can help transform the lives of the underprivileged and poorly-educated and raise standards for everyone else.

Gates, in the ‘Online Learning’ section of his latest annual letter for the Gates Foundation, goes on to argue for co-ordination in rating and organising resources to help teachers and students find the the best material. Despite the size and influence of his former employer, he gives a hat tip to the likes of us, toiling to raise standards in math, english, science…

Some of the best interactive software for K–8 learning is being done by startups using interactivity in innovative ways.

Someone give the man a free Math-Whizz subscription…

Friday Math Fun in Hawai’i

November 17th, 2009

As the Holiday season approaches, students at Lahaina Intermediate School (LIS), Hawai’i, have no excuse for missing out on their math lessons during ‘Furlough Fridays’.

ELL, SPED, and selected sixth-graders have 24/7 access to Math Whizz. This program builds basic math skills…

…All students have a number of lessons they must complete each week. Books are available in our school library for students to borrow. Read, read, and read! In fact, students should be accessing these programs at least once every weekend regardless of the state budget situation. These tools are provided to ensure that education doesn’t stop at the school door. It should continue within your homes. For those who don’t have computers in your homes, the West Maui Boys and Girls Club has computers for student use. We have community resources. We need to use them!

(http://www.lahainanews.com)

Great advice there - Math-Whizz Tutoring for Schools isn’t just for the classroom. Students can log in to their personal online math tutors wherever and whenever they choose, giving them a math boost on Furlough Fridays, weekends, and holidays too!

Get Spooked with Math-Whizz!

October 30th, 2009

In time for Hallowe’en, a spooky theme has been added to the Math-Whizz bedroom!

Students logging into our online math tutor this weekend through Tuesday will get a seasonal treat with a rolling pumpkin head, cobwebbed corners, and rolls of thunder beyond the window.

Whizzers can get a fright with some of our witch-themed measures lessons, ghoulish multiplication questions, and goblin-infested graphing problems. It’s all in Math-Whizz, with over 1200 more animated games to teach (nearly) every math objective under the clouded moon this weekend.

Have a happy Hallowe’en, and may your treat for 2009 be all the tasty maths skills you need!

In the meantime, check out this ghostly math lesson from an inspired teacher who takes some serious time with lesson preparation:


(via Seattle PI Big Blog)

Crowdsource our Math Software!

September 30th, 2009

Math-Whizz wants YOU!

Manesh Mistry, man of means in the Math-Whizz programming department, has created a brand new version of our award-winning Teachers’ Resource, but he needs you to help test it and give him feedback on the latest changes.

Whether you’re a teacher or student, you can help shape the next version of Math-Whizz.

Email Manesh - manesh[dot]mistry[at]whizzeducation[dot]com - to find out more and get exclusive access to the new version of Math-Whizz…

Beatles by Numbers

September 16th, 2009

How do you work out how to play the opening chord of ‘A Hard Day’s Night’? Use Math, of course!

This is interesting research from the bleeding-edge interface of hard math and pop culture. The research, reported by William Weir, seems to show that the hitherto mysterious opening chord of this classic pop song can be identified, thanks to mathematician Jason Brown:

Read the rest of this entry »

Blackboards or Whiteboards - the debate continues

September 9th, 2009

To be fair, the debate over the relative benefits of whiteboards and blackboards is not one that the Gods of Math-Whizz have been following closely of late.

Even so, the Gods noticed a short piece by Slate.com’s Green Lantern discussing the environmental impact of either device.

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