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Oxford Maths Professor Backs Web Games to Teach Kids
¡@Internet games can boost children's interest in mathematics, says a footballing Oxford University professor who plays wearing the prime number 17 and uses dance to prove theorems.
¡@Marcus Du Sautoy says there is "a real crisis" in maths education in English secondary schools where he says initially enthusiastic pupils "lose interest and become bored".
¡@His response is a glitzy maths website (www.mangahigh.com)that uses arcade-style games to teach children curriculum topics such as geometry and quadratic equations.
¡@Called Manga High and illustrated in the style of a Japanese comic, the website offers free games to the casual visitors but offers a structured maths course for subscribers and is aimed at schools as well as individual pupils.
¡@Du Sautoy is an adviser to the website, created by entrepreneur Toby Rowland, co-founder of King.com, one of the largest internet game companies.
¡@He said the aim had been to make an integral part of the games "really challenging kinds of maths" and not just mental arithmetic.
¡@A number of schools in London as well as Tennessee in the U.S are trying out the website, which includes a game called "Save Our Dumb Planet", where children have to enter coordinates on a graph to aim a missile at an asteroid heading for the Earth.
¡@"I think the teachers have been very impressed by the depth of the mathematics that we have managed to embed in these games. You can only get a high score if you do the maths," Du Sautoy said.
¡@He said the game was a good example of the sort of maths that real scientists use, in this case to chart the course of a spaceship through the solar system. ¡@¡½Reuters
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