Abby June Richards
  • Home
  • About
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Blog

Math Monsters

11/10/2014

0 Comments

 
Jeffrey Biles is a freelance programmer and author of Math Monsters, a game-changing new math curriculum. He took the time to chat with me about his project last week. I'd like to make this a series with various social entrepreneurs (please contact me if interested). This interview will be posted in parts and has been edited for length and clarity.

Me: Tell me about your project.

Jeffrey: My project is a new type of curriculum. It's completely interactive and has instant feedback, which is really good for learning, and it's something that kids really enjoy using. It's the same math content that you'd get in a textbook, but it has all these other features that psychology tells us are really great for learning. It encourages persistence, and does mastery based learning, which means it can tell when your child has mastered a particular skill set, and encourages them to go on to the next one. 

Me: It kind of looks like Pokemon. I don't know a whole lot about Pokemon, but it reminds me of it.

Jeffrey: That's exactly what I was going for. Most parents don't know a whole lot about Pokemon, but they know that their kids like it, and the kids have made that connection as well. One of them actually said it was more fun than Pokemon, which was "success". I asked, "Are you sure? Can I quote you on that?"

Me: How can people get involved?

Jeffrey: Right now, the kindergarten curriculum is completely free. A kindergartner, precocious preschooler, or first-grader who doesn't like math can go and play it. Please offer me feedback. I'll have the first grade curriculum out by the end of this year, and it's going to be $30 for the numbers portion, which is place value, skip-counting, and more advanced addition and subtraction.

Me: So are you charging a yearly fee, or do you buy it and have it forever?

Jeffrey: They have it forever for that child's account. In order to keep track of how the students are learning, and customize it to them, each child would need their own account. Another huge advantage of my curriculum is that errors are corrected immediately. If something is too hard, or out of order, it gets fixed. Even if a problem isn’t bad enough that someone calls about it,  I can still see from the data problems like people having a harder time picking up a certain math skill.  So I can make a change like offering a different explanation, or putting an intermediate skill right before it to bridge the gap.  At the start, Math Monsters will be the most fun math curriculum available, but over time it will also become the best.

Me: What makes it special? How is it different from other math games, and what is your competitive advantage?

Jeffrey: In a traditional math curriculum, you read an explanation in a book, then you have a set of problems, and you do them. You look at the back, and you see if you got them right or wrong. If you need more practice, maybe you buy another math book? If you mastered it very quickly, you're pretty bored the whole time. And if you're behind, then you're frustrated. Even if you're in the middle of the bell curve, you don't know what you got right or wrong until the very end. That makes it very difficult to learn, because your mistake is separated from the correction of the mistake. You're never able to connect the thought process you were going through when you made the mistake with the correction of it.

Math Monsters fixes that because it has immediate feedback. You submit the problem, and it immediately tells you whether you got it right or wrong. You get a little reward hit if you get it right, or a very small miss. The game has puzzles, which are math-based in increasing difficulty, and surrounding that, you have your meta game, which is making your monster stronger, and competing in battles. You have a 5-30 second loop of doing the puzzle, then you have a 30 second to three minute loop of doing the battle. You have your longer loop of training the monster and going through stages.


Sometimes you have to fight multiple monsters in a row, and it gets harder. It's like a mini test. But it's never structured as a test, because even if you fail, you always get another chance. And that's another reason why Math Monsters is better than traditional math worksheets, because in a worksheet, there's always a fear that you're going to fail and this will affect your grade. Being in a state of fear is not a great way to learn. In Math Monsters, all failure is temporary. All success is permanent. 

Read More
0 Comments

Startup Showcase - For-Profit, Social Impact @ SXSW Eco

11/2/2014

1 Comment

 
Ronan Farrow hosted this showcase, and I'm not sure that the crowd of serious eco-business people was quite ready for his glib game show style, but I found him to be entertaining enough. His resume is actually incredibly impressive, and I'm surprised I had never heard of him before. It probably doesn't help that we don't have cable. Moving on...

Some of the judges officiated other showcases as well, but I haven't mentioned them yet. I felt privileged to be in the same room with them:
Steve Wanta of Whole Foods' non­-profit, Whole Planet Foundation
Cody Nystrom, investor at SJF Ventures
Gene Han of Target (yes, that Target, and no, I can't find a specific page on their sustainability initiatives, so I'm pointing to Target.com)
Courtney Bickert of United Nations Foundation
Ben Schiller of Fast Company

I am most interested in working with organizations that do good and promote responsibility, but have a for­-profit element that keeps them from being at the mercy of grants and donations, so this showcase was especially exciting. The start-ups' goals ranged from more conscious consuming to creating jobs in less-developed countries through franchising/licensing products. This showcase also seemed to have more contenders, and I was able to stay for the whole thing! These are inspiring models for study, and I plan to give several of them my business and/or attention.

Drink Well ­- Removes arsenic from water, transforming the global water crisis into an entrepreneurial opportunity with a micro-franchise model.

Spend Consciously ­-  BuyPartisan mobile app gives political spending information for companies on products you plan to purchase and ultimately helps you align your buying habits with your values and groups with which you identify.

Harbor Biometric ­- First ID stores medical information based on your fingerprint so that emergency crews can access your prescriptions and preexisting conditions to treat you properly, even if you're not able to communicate at the time.

Do Amorè -­ Buy wedding bands and engagement rings made from materials that are ethically sourced and contribute to water access at the same time. Hearing about this company made me wish that I hadn't already bought our wedding bands. They have a really cool business model that lets people get inexpensive versions of the rings they like in the mail to try on before purchasing.

Elequa ­- Water treatment system has new technology "electrocoagulation" to separate pollutants from water, originally developed at UTSA.

Wilding & Co. -­ Pine Trees are an invasive species in New Zealand, taking over land and hogging resources from native plants. This company turns them (free inventory! helps the community!) into pure essential Douglas Fir oil & distilled pine mulch, which can be converted to diesel.

Emergence Bioenergy ­- "Instead of producing power centrally and creating transmission infrastructure to deliver it to people, what if those without energy could produce their own power locally from fuel already widely available around them?" This is a really cool model that helps under-served, remote populations gain access to electricity, a resource that most of us take for granted.

Underground Networks ­- What if government weren't run by corporations? What if we, the people, were able to communicate with our politicians, and get their response to our message? What if we were able to do this on our smartphones? Enter Underground Networks' mobile app (coming soon - sign up for launch notification). They have a great three-minute video.

Accompany -­ "Style with a conscience." Fair-trade products that are absolutely beautiful!

Give Gab -­ Volunteers can track their time spent with various organizations, build a resume, and donate to causes that are important to them.

Half United - I remember Carmen, one of the founders, mentioning that they'd been able to reach their current level with no debt. She and her brother started with almost nothing and began to paint on towels and mugs, aiming to donate half their profits to child hunger. The "Giving Back is the New Black" t-shirt is my favorite!

Naadam Cashmere ­- Responsibly-sourced cashmere clothing
1 Comment

Can Austin Become the Social Entrepreneurship Capital of the World?

10/26/2014

0 Comments

 
On October 14, in Austin, SXSW graciously hosted a talk by Suzi Sosa of Verb on the social entrepreneurship movement. It was really informative to me and inspiring as well, because she echoed sentiments that I've felt but have perhaps not put into words - or felt justified in saying. She said that young people today don't want to go to work for a company that doesn't do good - but they don't want to make $25K per year, either. Concentrating on supporting myself and getting an education and all the while wishing and wondering how I could do more for my community is my reality. Suzi gave examples of companies that are making it work, this marriage of profit and giving back. Companies can be non-profit, for-profit, a hybrid, or some other combination along a spectrum that she presented. These models rely less on philanthropy, because they are making a profit on at least some of their products and services.

Her message was that Austin is uniquely positioned to be The Social Entrepreneurship Capital of the World, and how she proposes we can make that happen. Austin is a good location because we are okay with new and weird ideas, and comfortable with revolt. In fact, I might argue we prefer to feel like we are in revolt. The City of Austin designated October as Social Innovation Month. There are great co-working spaces, such as Center 61, and organizations like UnLtd USA, Austin Center for Design and Innovation + that provide funding, support, and education. However, Austin faces challenges in this goal as well. Challenges that Austin might face are the lack education in social entrepreneurship, a need for more capital, and the need for a brand.

One of the best parts of the talk was finding out about the companies that are already leading the charge on social entrepreneurship here in Austin and around the country. One of Suzi's areas of specialization seems to be helping people scale their models in order to reach more people.

Emancipet -  Mobile spay, neuter, and vaccination services
Eco-Rise - Helping low-income schools learn more about sustainability, translating to future jobs
Easter Seals - Help people with disabilities find employment
Aunt Bertha - Users can easily search for programs in their area to address housing, food, job training issues and more
CTC International - Helping Kenyans build and maintain sustainable infrastructure through work
Reaction Housing - Emergency shelters that are stackable and thus easily deployed & transported in the event of natural disaster

I hope to see more of Suzi and her efforts in the future. I can tell that I could learn a lot more from her!
0 Comments
<<Previous
Forward>>

    Author

    I am an aspiring CPA who cares about income equality, sustainability, and chasing dreams, living in Austin, Texas.

    Archives

    November 2014
    October 2014

    Categories

    All
    Freelancing
    Jeffrey Biles
    Math
    Math Monsters
    Social Entrepreneurship

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.