A curriculum that begins with who you are, not what you don't know yet.
This isn't a textbook. It's an invitation to discover mathematics at any age — through building, drawing, storytelling, moving, and reasoning. Verse-al Maths covers seven core topics across 111 interactive activities, and it's designed so that every learner can find their way in. It will equip you to pass GCSE Maths on any exam board, but we hope it does something more: helps you find joy in the magic of maths all around you.
Everyone approaches mathematics differently. Some people need to see it; others need to build it, feel it, tell its story, or express it in their own language. These five Ways of Knowing aren't labels — they're lenses. Every activity in this curriculum is designed through one or more of them.
Facts fade. Skills endure. Every activity in this curriculum is mapped to at least two of these eight transferable skills — the kind of thinking that stays with you long after the exam is over.
Machines can calculate faster than any human ever will. But mathematical thinking — the ability to ask the right question, spot a hidden pattern, build intuition about whether something makes sense — is irreplaceably human.
When you learn to translate between words and symbols, to sense-check whether an answer is reasonable, to investigate why something works and not just that it works — you're developing precisely the capabilities that no algorithm can replicate.
This curriculum doesn't teach you to compete with a calculator. It teaches you to think in ways a calculator never could. Those are the skills that will define your thinking, your career, and your creativity for decades to come — in fields that may not even exist yet.
Education technology often tracks, nudges, and gamifies. We chose a different path. This curriculum is built on trust, not surveillance.
This curriculum doesn't assume everyone learns the same way. You might be someone who needs to see an idea drawn out, or someone who understands by building something, or someone who grasps a concept best when you hear the story behind it. We meet you there.
There are 111 activities across 7 topics, each designed so you can see how mathematics connects to the real world — to architecture, art, nature, history, and the patterns hiding in everyday life.
Nobody is watching to see if you're "fast enough." You work at your pace, and the curriculum adapts to how you learn best. By the end, you'll have the knowledge and skills to pass GCSE Maths on any exam board — but more importantly, you'll have developed a mathematical mind that's genuinely curious.
Five Ways of Knowing give you a framework for genuine differentiation. Instead of teaching to one modality, you can help every student find their entry point into a topic — whether that's visual, structural, narrative, expressive, or embodied.
Eight transferable skills are mapped to every activity. Your role isn't just to deliver content; it's to develop capabilities. This curriculum makes that visible — you can see exactly which skills each activity builds, and plan your teaching around the skills your students most need to develop.
Three navigation views — by Topic, by Way of Knowing, and by Skill — give you genuine flexibility. Teach thematically, linearly, or in spirals. The 111 activities are fully mapped to GCSE outcomes, and the sequencing is yours to choose.
Everything works offline. There's no tracking or data collection. Your classroom's learning stays in your classroom.
You might remember maths as a subject where you either understood it or you didn't. This curriculum is built on a different idea — that mathematical thinking is something everyone does naturally, just in different ways.
Your child might come at quadratic equations through architecture, or understand probability through the history of games of chance. This curriculum celebrates that diversity instead of penalising it. Your child's approach to maths isn't a limitation — it's their strength.
The 111 activities across 7 topics span the full GCSE curriculum, each connected to real-world applications. The goal isn't just a test score (though that will come). It's genuine mathematical thinking: the ability to ask questions, spot patterns, build intuition, and enjoy the process.
You don't need to be "good at maths" to support your child with this. Just show them that you're curious. Ask questions. Explore together. That's the whole point.
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