Our news

Become a math genius using apps and websites

Conrad Wolfram is the mathematician and founder of the Computer Based Math organization, which is dedicated to redesigning mathematics content and exporting an artificial intelligence-based model to the rest of the world.

Wolfram believes the problem with manual calculations is the time students waste. He thinks that, given the availability of tools like computers, these machines should take on this function. He also promotes the idea that artificial intelligence can guide students through the process based on their individual learning pace.

Furthermore, the professor asserts that there is a clear difference between the mathematics taught in school and the use we make of it in our real lives.

He asserts that "It would be more realistic if students knew how to calculate things like weather probability or how to interpret the statistical data presented by governments."“

The professor's company has designed the academic mathematics program for various public schools in Estonia, in which students focus on probability and statistics. They ask questions such as: Is my height average?

Has a learning method based on artificial intelligence arrived in Spain?

Daniel González, a Spanish industrial engineer, says that the debate in Spain on this issue is that "official education fails because it does not have the resources to offer a personalized method to students."“

Smartick; artificial intelligence that adapts to each student's learning level

González has invented a method called Smartick, It consists of artificial intelligence software that analyzes how a child solves problems, adapting the content to the speed of their learning, thus stimulating and motivating the student with challenges and proposals adapted to their level.

This is a software program that is worked on daily by more than 40 people, including a professor of mathematics didactics who works at the Autonomous University of Madrid and an expert in artificial intelligence from the Carlos III University.

This artificial intelligence system, which adapts to the student's learning level, has been implemented in more than 20 schools in Spain and is used by over 25,000 students. It currently costs approximately 30 euros.

Daniel González has been awarded the Entrepreneur XXI Prize for this project and has earned recognition as one of the 15 best startups in the world by "The Next Web", a meeting that annually brings together the most innovative technology companies in New York.

19/01/2018