91桃色 Professor, Alum Partner to Teach Kids Math
New program is designed to better prepare kids for school
鈥淥ur mission is to ensure that all children understand mathematics.鈥
91桃色 Alumnus Aditya Nagrath (BS 鈥01, PhD 鈥08) believes his latest creation can help accomplish that mission. Nagrath, who studied mathematics and computer science at 91桃色, runs his own software company, and this January he unveiled his latest creation, Elephant Learning. The math game is designed to prepare young kids for school by understanding basic math concepts.
鈥淔our out of five children are coming into kindergarten already behind in math,鈥 Nagrath says. 鈥淭eachers are trying to teach these kids how to add, but they don鈥檛 even know how to count. The way I look at what we are doing is, we are giving these children a fighting chance.鈥
Creating the game would not have been possible without help from Alvaro Arias, a math professor in 91桃色鈥檚 Division of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. Arias created the algorithm that makes the game possible and sets it apart from other math games in the market.
鈥淥ur algorithm really adapts quickly, and it adapts up and down,鈥 Arias says. 鈥淥ne thing that is important in mathematics is that you go back if your kid forgets a concept and you learn it again. What our algorithm does is detect any gaps in understanding and fills those gaps with proven activities written by early age education experts."
The game鈥檚 concepts focus on counting, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and fractions. Results show that kids who play just ten minutes a day for three months can learn a years worth of concepts. Parents are provided with real-time reports that show their child's progress and advice on how to integrate math into their everyday life. Nagrath and Arias decided to gear the game to young kids because studies show that if kids don鈥檛 understand the concept of fractions, they鈥檒l face difficulties understanding other math concepts later in life.
鈥淚f kids don鈥檛 learn the basic concepts, it鈥檚 no wonder they are anxious about math later in life because they don鈥檛 understand what you鈥檙e talking about,鈥 Nagrath says. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 lose our children in sixth grade like some research suggests; we lost them long before, and they didn鈥檛 have a fighting chance.鈥
Some students also face challenges arising from their socioeconomic status and the quality of their schools. That鈥檚 why Elephant Learning has partnered with the Boys and Girls Clubs and the YMCA to get the game into the hands of kids. The firm is also giving a free subscription to a low-income child every time a single purchase of the game is made.
鈥淲e are a university dedicated to the public good, and we want to do that too with Elephant Learning,鈥 Arias says.