Clear practice. Useful feedback. Steady progress.
Grasp Maths is being built to make online maths practice more purposeful. Learners practise carefully selected skills, receive immediate results and build a clear record of what they understand and what needs more work.
Practice should lead to understanding, not just another score.
Grasp Maths is built around a simple idea: regular practice becomes more useful when learners can see exactly what they are improving and where they still need support.
Structured practice
Questions are organised by year group, topic, skill and difficulty so that practice has a clear purpose.
Meaningful feedback
Results are broken down into useful information rather than being reduced to only a final percentage.
Visible progress
Saved results make it easier to compare recent work, notice improvement and choose the next practice activity.
A simple experience from first question to next step.
The first version of Grasp Maths focuses on a reliable practice cycle. It does not try to imitate a tutor immediately. It first makes the essentials work well.
Select a year group, topic and practice type.
Answer fresh questions in a focused, easy-to-use interface.
See the result without waiting for manual checking.
Keep results securely online and access them from different devices.
A strong foundation before advanced adaptation.
The immediate goal is to create a dependable subscription practice platform. More advanced tutor-like adaptation can be introduced later, once the question system, marking, learner data and progress tracking are working reliably.
Simple enough to use regularly. Detailed enough to be useful.
Every part of the platform should help the learner complete the task, understand the result and return for the next useful activity.
Practice and progress should work on phone, tablet and computer.
Each account should only access its own learner profiles and results.
The next step should be understandable, not mysterious.
Begin with structured practice and build from there.
Create an account and start with a short maths activity.