Get your students engaged in comparing values using the inequality signs with Mangahigh's math game 'Deepest Ocean'. Students start with the '>' sign and positive values, collecting fish where the statement is true. The more fish the student collects the more challenging the questions become, progressing into deeper waters with '>' and '<' signs and negative integers.
Example of blended learning lesson
Introduce your students to prime factors through the use of Mangahigh's adaptive quiz 'find prime factors'. Students will start with 'Easy' questions to help introduce new ideas and then move onto 'Medium' questions with some scaffolded support. Students then progress onto 'Hard' questions that really test their understanding, and the most able will move on to 'Extreme' questions that will challenge even the brightest students.
Example of blended learning lesson
Curriculum-aligned activities
Use efficient written methods to add and subtract whole numbers up to 1000.
Understand what operation to perform to the numerator and denominator of a fraction in order to rationalize the denominator. Perform further simplification.
Decide which of two numbers from 1 to 100 is the larger. From a list of integers up to 100, arrange in ascending or descending order.
Understand very simple ratio to compare two amounts where the ratio will be given in the question. Also, find ratios of amounts to each other and simplify. Units will be the same each time.
Round to positive powers of 10 e.g. 100,10, kilometre (when measure is expressed in metres). Include examples of decimals (both between 0-1 and greater than 1) rounded to the nearest integer.
Find a linear nth term and express it in words and algebraically. The terms arithmetic sequence and linear sequence should be understood.
We’re loved by both teachers and students globally. Here’s the proof!
Mangahigh turns our students into “math addicts“ who compete with each other for top scores and gold medals. And since the quizzes reward both accurate recall of knowledge and deep conceptual understanding, every hour they spent having fun makes them better mathematicians. Five stars.
I have used Mangahigh in my classroom for over 5 years. What keeps me coming back are the math games and wide range of concepts that are offered. But the best part is the fact that the kids LOVE to play it. I have students beg me to assign them Teacher Challenges! Begging for more math work? I am ok with that!!
Kids loved it; an ADHD student who has NEVER before been able to focus in the last periods of the day; he wouldn't stop till he got a medal! Absolutely phenomenal! His mother is overjoyed, and the rest of the math staff room were gobsmacked!