Rescue the summer landslide! Learn a mathematical concept in 5 minutes. Experience it now.
In Taiwan Province Province, many young people invest in education reform together with non-profit organizations or social enterprises, such as Liu Anting, who founded "Teaching for Taiwan Province Province", and Lu, CEO of Unified Education. There are many similar stories in China. Yang Jianli, co-founder and CEO of Onion Mathematics, established a self-made online mathematics teaching content platform. In just two years, the number of onion mathematics employees has surpassed the Khan education platform in the United States, and the mathematics learning content has only one subject. Students' online use time in a single month has reached one-fifth of that of Khan Academy, which started its business more than 0/0 years ago. Now, on the unified education platform of Taiwan Province Province, you can also see the animated short film of onion mathematics teaching. At present, 95% of high schools in China have onion mathematics users, and 50% of junior high school mathematics teachers use onion mathematics as teaching materials.
The Onion Mathematics Team is also very concerned about the teachers' educational reform in Taiwan Province Province, and is very interested in the innovation of teachers' teaching methods in Taiwan Province Province. Last year, it organized a delegation to attend the annual meeting of Taiwan Province Xuesida.
165438+1At the end of October, Onion Mathematics was awarded the "Best Educational Tool Innovation Award" by China Academy of Educational Sciences in Beijing, which stood out from more than 100 works. The reason for winning the prize is to condense 45 minutes of boring classroom content into 5 minutes of exciting and interesting animation, which greatly improves the learning efficiency and makes students better appreciate the fun of learning.
Beijing in early winter is cold and dry, and the occasional sunshine brings precious warmth. The interview team of "The Story" walked into the winding old hutong of Beijing's Fourth Ring Road. Clothes were hanging on the windowsill. The wires in mid-air twisted like Einstein's beard, entered through a narrow door that only one person could pass through, and passed through an old building full of graffiti. The office landscape in hutong is in sharp contrast with that in ancient times. Much like the entrepreneurial space in Silicon Valley in the United States, the first floor is a rest area with a billiard table and a couch with lazy bones. A dozen college students who look like they are in their twenties stay in this living room. Some people discuss around the coffee table, while others think alone. This group of people is completely rewriting the math textbooks of junior and senior high schools.