Drag some tiles onto the board to form an equation then click the confirm button.
Two players take it in turns to form equations on the board using the available tiles. The first turn of the first player should have the equation going through the centre square. For the following turns, each new equation should use at least one tile of an existing equation but any bonus (such as double symbol score) earned by the tile being reused does not apply to the new equation.
When both players agree that the equation is correct the score is calculated and recorded then the confirm button pressed.
The first player to earn 200 points is the winner
The names 'Player 1' and 'Player 2' and the scores are editable so you can keep your own score.
The score for each symbol can be found on the bottom right corner of the tile. The scores are increased if the tile is placed on a square with one of the following codes.
2S - Double symbol score. 3S - Triple symbol score. 4S - Quadruple symbol score.
2E - Double equation score. 3E - Triple equation score. 4E - Quadruple equation score.
This game is designed for pupils to manage themselves. They judge whether equations formed are correct and they keep their own score. Consequently the system is unable to automatically award trophies. Teachers, logged into their Transum subscription accounts are able to award trophies to pupils who have made a particularly good effort playing this game by using the button below (which appears when you are signed in).
If you do not yet have an account and you are a teacher, tutor or parent you can apply for one by completing the form on the Sign Up page.
A Transum subscription also gives you access to the 'Class Admin' student management system, downloadable worksheets, many more teaching resources and opens up ad-free access to the Transum website for you and your pupils.
Mandy Messenger,
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
"Why does it not calculate the scores? That stay at zero.
[Transum: Thank you for your comment Mandy. The idea is for players to calculate their own scores and type them in to the score board where the zeros are.]"