With FastFig you can quickly edit and solve everything from arithmetic to calculus. Type and share interactive math documents online and with mobile devices. Keystrokes instantly become math symbols.
Add graphs, videos, and pictures to illustrate your work. Perfect for worksheets, homework, and reports.
Sharing is as simple as sending a link. Plus, you can embed FastFig documents in your website or blog.
Khan Academy offers practice exercises, instructional videos, and a personalized learning dashboard that empower learners to study at their own pace in and outside of the classroom. They tackle maths, science, computer programming, history, art history, economics, and more. Their maths missions guide learners from kindergarten to calculus using state-of-the-art, adaptive technology that identifies strengths and learning gaps. They've also partnered with institutions like NASA, The Museum of Modern Art, The California Academy of Sciences, and MIT to offer specialized content.
Paperspade might be described as a language translator. Unlike Google Translate or any other feature, it can't translate English to Spanish, French to Russian, or any other spoken languages for that matter. In fact, in can only translate exactly one language into another. The software is designed to translate natural English language into complex mathematical notation.
Anyone who's taken high level mathematics knows that typing out equations for assignments can be a pain. It requires either constantly copying and pasting symbols from random websites or memorizing a Byzantine system of Unicode hotkeys. With Paperspade, users can use English to type in the equation that they want, and the software will automatically translate those words into the accepted mathematical notation. That means no more hunting around for the hotkey that represents double integral or summation.
At CodePen.io, they describe themselves as a “playground for the front-end side of the web.” CodePen is great for testing out bugs, collaborating, and finding new inspiration. It works by allowing you to create “pens”, which are sets of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. You can then display those pens on your profile, take feedback, and continue to edit those pens at any time.
Like many live code playgrounds, CodePen lets you learn in an open-source environment, displaying a live preview of the code changes, and even letting you embed your CodePen demos on any web page
GeoGebra allows students to create math models and interactive with them by dragging objects and changing parameters. The program is designed for classrooms in secondary schools but can be used for any student studying geometry, algebra, or calculus. Students can create graphs with with points, vectors, segments, lines and conic sections as well as functions while changing them dynamically afterwards. In addition, equations and coordinates can be entered directly to generate graphs.
The website also allows educators to create worksheets, which they are encouraged to share with the public.
In 2012, a group of engineers with a common passion for Mathematics and an ambition to build a learning environment came together to nurture an idea and explore the possibilities. The idea and the underlying mission was to provide young students with the tools to boost their reasoning, analytical and problem solving skills. That’s because Maths is not just numbers, it is a concept that's deeply embedded in the real world.