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Message: Hello! I saw this Tried & Tested Review on Teach Primary Magazine's website and thought you might like it - please find an excerpt below: Matific Matific is an immersive series of software apps and teaching resources for tablets and personal computers designed to support primary maths education and bring back the fun and Aha! moments to learning. There apps are available in two versions: Matific@Home for home use and Matific@School which is equipped with student diagnostics and analytics and a teacher’s dashboard. The web version is available at www.matific.com and comes with hundreds of animated activities suitable for children from the Foundation Stage through to Year 6. What you are getting here are activities to enhance and enrich your exisiting teaching to help make maths more appealing to children. There is a whole pedagogy behind Matific which is worth exploring. Each instructional activity within Matific is called an ‘episode’ which is basically a game-oriented family of mini-tasks for children to engage with. These playful and interactive games have been designed to convey a maths concept or skill over 5 to 15 minutes along with numerous interactive worksheets designed to build a mastery of the related skill. The hands-on episodes focus on building an intuitive understanding of the subject matter. It’s important to note that the activities on offer here don’t go out of their way to teach maths but to support you in teaching maths. Matific’s approach to early maths education can be best described as nonsense learning, versatile, object-based, bite-sized, customised and spiral. The Matific approach argues that too many maths programs sugarcoat important maths concepts with gamification elements and I agree with that. If you are going to master a common task then it’s probably best practised in a common setting and not by number eating pterodactyls which might be fun but it’s not real life. Obviously the Matific activities have been gamified but these have been done sensibly, thoughtfully and without infantile metaphors. Yes it has avatars and badges but the learning contexts are not decorated with unrealistic representations but simulated with numerous familiar objects from beads to boats so that the experience can still be ‘hands-on’. The games are also varied enough to help children encounter and practise a new concept and skill in more than one situation which is good planning because different children relate differently to different tasks and settings. I like Matific because it is easy to incorporate into your teaching world. You can select the games that best support your maths teaching and assemble them into a customised bundle if you wish so… If you want to read the full article, please visit: https://www.teachprimary.com/tried_and_tested/view/matific Thanks!