The whole lesson library
118 ways to learn by doing.
Pick a topic and jump into a hands-on game. Kids predict, build, test and explain while Ako coaches the next thought out loud.
Ages 4–13
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Every card opens a real interactive lesson—not a worksheet or a quiz dressed up as a game.
Math
Numbers, shapes and problem solving
Angle ArchitectAn angle measures the amount of turn between two rays: angles range from acute through reflex, a protractor reads the inside turn from 0° to the degree, and missing angles can be found from 90°, 180°, and 360° totals.
Open lesson
Apple AddAdding means putting groups together and counting every object in the new whole group.
Open lesson Area & Perimeter ParkArea counts the square units inside a shape, while perimeter measures the unit lengths around its outside boundary; equal areas can have different perimeters.
Open lesson
Balance LabAn equation is a balance: doing the same thing to both sides keeps it equal and can isolate x, while unequal changes break equality.
Open lesson
Block BuilderMultiplication is a rectangle: the number of rows multiplied by the number of columns equals the area, so every times-table product can be built and counted as an array.
Open lesson Chart ChampsPicture marks and bar heights encode data values; matching the named category to its mark and reading the scale lets us compare, calculate, and rebuild the data accurately.
Open lesson Clock QuestThe short hand shows the hour and the long hand counts minutes around the clock; reading or setting both hands together makes one exact time.
Open lesson
Clock WorkshopA clock’s short hand points to the hour and its long hand points to the minutes; reading both hands together tells the time.
Open lesson
Coordinate QuestA coordinate pair (x, y) gives an exact location: move horizontally along x first, then vertically along y; negative values reverse the direction from the origin.
Open lesson
Counting CrittersCounting tells how many: give each thing exactly one number, and the last number counted is the total.
Open lesson
Cube BuilderVolume is the number of unit cubes that fill a three-dimensional solid; equal layers show why length × width × height counts every cube inside.
Open lesson
Data DetectiveCharts encode data with marks, heights, areas, and scales, so matching a category to its mark lets us read, compare, and rebuild the underlying values.
Open lesson
Decimals DinerA decimal point anchors place value: decimals can be read, located, compared, rounded, scaled, added, and subtracted by tracking what every place is worth.
Open lesson
Deep FreezeIntegers describe positions relative to zero; adding moves in the signed direction, while subtracting moves in the opposite direction.
Open lesson
Division DashDivision shares a total equally: the quotient tells how many belong in each group (or how many equal groups can be made), and any amount left over is the remainder.
Open lesson
Division StationLong division repeats divide, multiply, subtract, and bring down; each cycle fixes one quotient digit, and the final leftover is a remainder smaller than the divisor.
Open lesson
Estimation StationA useful estimate is a nearby, quick answer made with groups, familiar benchmarks, or rounded numbers; comparing it with the actual result helps us judge whether an answer is reasonable.
Open lesson Fraction FlipA fraction, decimal, and percent can name the same amount; equivalent forms fill exactly the same length of one whole.
Open lessonFractions describe covered equal parts of one whole; equivalent fractions cover the same space, and equal-sized wholes make unlike fractions directly comparable.
Open lesson
Fraction Slice: Pizza ParlorA fraction is an amount made from equal parts of one whole; equivalent fractions re-slice the same amount, and fractions can be combined only after their parts use a common slice size.
Open lesson
Fraction WallFractions are equivalent when they cover the same length of the same whole; lining bars up makes equivalence, comparison, and simplification visible.
Open lesson
Gator ChompThe symbols > and < open toward the greater value, while = shows equal values; comparing place values lets us use the same relationship for whole numbers, decimals, fractions, and ordered sets.
Open lesson Grid RangerAn ordered pair (x, y) names one exact point by giving a horizontal x move from the origin first, followed by a vertical y move; negative values reverse those directions.
Open lesson
Measure LabMeasurements pair a number with a unit; instrument marks show equal intervals, and converting units changes the number without changing the amount.
Open lesson
Money MarketMoney amounts are totals of coin and note values; exact payment matches a price, while change is the difference between what was paid and what it cost.
Open lesson
Number FriendsEach numeral stands for an amount: the numeral 3 means three things.
Open lesson
Number LadderAdding combines every member of two or more groups into one total; the groups change arrangement, but no members disappear.
Open lesson
Number Line JumperA number line puts values in order at equal intervals: direction shows increase or decrease, while the scale tells what each hop is worth across whole numbers, negatives, fractions, and decimals.
Open lesson
Pattern PartyA pattern repeats; once you spot the repeat, it tells you what comes next.
Open lesson
Place Value TowersA digit's position determines its value; ten units in one place can be regrouped as one unit in the place to its left without changing the number.
Open lesson
Prime DetectiveA prime number has exactly two factors, 1 and itself; a composite number has additional factor pairs, which can be found by testing divisors only up to its square root.
Open lesson
Probability MachineA single random trial is uncertain, but probability predicts the stable pattern that emerges across many trials.
Open lesson
Pythagoras BuilderFor a right triangle, the square areas on the two short sides together exactly equal the square area on the longest side: a² + b² = c².
Open lesson
Ratio Recipe MixerA ratio stays the same when both quantities are scaled by the same factor, so equivalent ratios make the same mixture.
Open lesson
Roman QuestRoman numerals use symbols with fixed values; reading from left to right usually adds them, but a smaller value before a larger value is subtracted.
Open lesson
Rounding RodeoTo round a number, place it between two neighbouring round numbers and choose the closer one; an exact midpoint rounds up.
Open lesson
Shape FactoryA shape is identified by its structure: 2D shapes have sides and vertices, while 3D solids have faces, edges, and vertices; a valid net folds so its faces meet exactly once.
Open lesson
Shape SorterShapes have names and can be told apart by being round or by their number and length of sides, even when their size, colour, or direction changes.
Open lesson Shape SpaceA shape keeps its identity when it turns, changes size, or appears as an everyday object; its straight sides and corners identify a 2D shape, while faces, edges, vertices, and curved surfaces identify a 3D solid.
Open lesson
Skip Count SafariSkip-counting makes equal jumps on the number line; each landing adds the same amount, so the number of jumps connects directly to multiplication.
Open lesson
Slope SkateparkSlope is steepness measured as rise divided by run: a bigger ratio is steeper, and equal ratios are equally steep.
Open lesson
Stat SquadMean, median, mode, and range describe different features of the same data: equal share, ordered middle, most frequent value, and total spread.
Open lesson Story ProblemsThe action in a story tells us which operation connects its numbers; representing that action as a number sentence makes the answer explainable.
Open lesson
Symmetry StudioA line of symmetry is a fold line that pairs every point with a matching point the same perpendicular distance on the other side; a shape can have none, one, or several such lines.
Open lesson
Time StationElapsed time is how far a clock moves forward from a start time to an end time; counting on through friendly hour boundaries makes that journey visible and reliable.
Open lesson Times Table ArenaA multiplication fact counts equal groups: a × b is a equal rows with b in each row, and the product is the total across every row.
Open lesson
Vault CrackerAn equation is a balanced scale: doing the same move to both sides keeps it equal, and inverse operations isolate the unknown so its value can be revealed.
Open lesson
Which Has More?One group can have more, fewer, or the same number of things, and counting tells which for sure.
Open lessonScience
Experiments, nature, Earth and space
Acids and Bases GardenpH measures how acidic or basic a solution is: acid lowers pH, base raises pH, and neutral is 7.
Open lesson
Atom ForgeProtons decide which element an atom is, neutrons change its isotope and mass, and electrons change its charge.
Open lesson
Biome ExplorerA biome's long-term temperature and rainfall shape its vegetation, which determines which plants, animals, and food chains can survive there.
Open lessonAnimal bodies contain fitted layers—skin, muscles, organs, and skeleton—and each layer has a different job while working as one connected body.
Open lesson
Cell FactoryA cell works like a connected factory: specialized organelles have different jobs, and changing one limiting station can change the output of the whole system.
Open lesson
Circuit RescueElectric current flows only around one complete, unbroken loop; a switch controls that loop but is not the same as a broken wire, and every component in a series circuit shares the same route.
Open lesson
Density SubmarineAn object sinks when it is denser than water, floats when it is less dense, and hovers when the densities match; changing mass or volume changes density.
Open lesson Dino DigPalaeontologists identify dinosaurs by comparing combinations of fossil features—such as skulls, horns, plates, claws, limb proportions, and tails—rather than guessing from one bone.
Open lesson
Dragon BreederAn offspring receives one allele for each gene from each parent; dominant alleles can mask recessive alleles, and a Punnett square predicts probabilities rather than guaranteeing one outcome.
Open lesson
Element LabThe periodic table is a map: atomic number identifies an element by its proton count, periods are rows, groups are columns with related properties, and symbols are short element names.
Open lesson
Food Web BalanceEnergy flows from food to eater, so changing one population can send rises, falls, booms, and crashes through several links of a food web.
Open lesson
Forces Tug of WarEqual opposing forces balance and keep an object still; when one opposing force is bigger, the object moves in that force's direction, regardless of headcount.
Open lessonFossils are clues preserved in rock; palaeontologists carefully uncover their shapes and positions, then fit that evidence together to infer what an extinct animal looked like.
Open lesson
Heart Pump LabThe heart is a pump: each muscle squeeze raises pressure, one-way valves direct that pressure into forward blood flow, and body demand changes how quickly the pump repeats.
Open lesson Life Cycle LabA living thing passes through stages in a particular order, and reproduction links the adult stage to a new generation so the pattern repeats as a life cycle.
Open lesson
Light Reflection MazeLight travels in straight lines and reflects from a mirror so its angle away from the normal equals its angle toward the normal.
Open lessonThe Sun always lights half the Moon; as the Moon moves around Earth, our changing view of that same lit half makes the phases repeat in order.
Open lesson
Moss & Cog WorkshopSimple machines make jobs easier by trading force for distance or changing the direction of a force; they do not remove the load's weight or create energy.
Open lessonThe ocean changes in zones with depth: sunlight fades, temperature falls, and pressure rises, so animals need different adaptations to live at different depths.
Open lessonAn orbit is constant falling: gravity bends sideways motion around a planet, while too little sideways speed crashes and too much escapes.
Open lesson
Photosynthesis GreenhousePlants use light energy to rearrange atoms from water and CO₂ into sugar and oxygen; atoms regroup rather than appearing, and the scarcest required input limits production.
Open lesson Plant PartsEach plant part has a distinct job, and roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and seeds work with sunlight, water, and air to help the whole plant live, grow, and begin a new generation.
Open lesson
Rainforest LayersA rainforest has four vertical layers, and different animals fit each layer because light, food, movement routes, moisture, and safety change from top to bottom.
Open lesson
Reaction BalancerA chemical reaction rearranges atoms but does not create or destroy them, so a correct equation has the same number of each kind of atom before and after the reaction.
Open lesson
Rock RoverRock types are stages in a cycle: cooling makes igneous rock, surface weathering plus deposition and cementing makes sedimentary rock, heat and pressure make metamorphic rock, and melting returns rock to magma.
Open lesson
Seasons GlobeEarth's fixed axial tilt changes how directly sunlight hits each hemisphere: direct light is concentrated, while slanted light spreads the same energy over more area and heats less.
Open lesson
Sky HighAs altitude increases, Earth’s air gets gradually thinner: birds and airplanes need enough air, balloons rise into thin air, and satellites orbit above almost all of it.
Open lesson
Solubility KitchenA liquid can dissolve only a limited amount of solute at a given temperature. Heating usually raises that limit, while cooling can make some dissolved solute become solid again.
Open lesson
Sound MixerFrequency controls pitch and amplitude controls loudness; either one can change without changing the other.
Open lesson
Soup MoleculesHeating gives particles more energy, so they move faster on average; the fastest particles at a liquid's surface can escape as vapor, which is evaporation and can cool the liquid left behind.
Open lesson
Star MapperConstellations are recognizable patterns we see from Earth: their stars are real, but the connecting lines are imaginary guides, and hemisphere and season change which patterns are easiest to find.
Open lesson
States of Matter ChamberSolids, liquids, and gases contain the same-sized particles with different amounts of energy: heating makes particles move faster and more freely, while cooling makes them slow down and lock closer together.
Open lesson
Survive the IslandInherited traits vary within a population; when an environment lets better-suited individuals survive and reproduce more, those traits become more frequent over generations, so the population evolves.
Open lesson
TectonicsTectonic plates keep moving, and pulling apart, pushing together, or sliding past creates predictable patterns of ridges, mountains, volcanoes, and earthquakes.
Open lesson
Trajectory LaunchA projectile's launch angle and power determine a predictable parabolic path; the apex and landing point can be read from that curve and represented by a quadratic equation.
Open lessonHeat and expanding trapped gas build pressure in a magma chamber; that pressure forces magma up a vent, and more stored pressure produces a bigger eruption.
Open lesson
Waves String StudioA wave has amplitude (height), wavelength (spacing), frequency and speed. Amplitude is independent of wavelength, while frequency and wavelength trade off when speed stays fixed: speed = frequency × wavelength.
Open lesson Weather WatchWeather clues such as clouds, temperature, wind, and repeating observations help us describe current conditions, prepare sensibly, and make simple forecasts that are predictions rather than promises.
Open lessonReading & English
Reading, spelling and grammar
Alphabet ArcadeA letter keeps its identity when it is uppercase or lowercase, and its sound helps us recognize words that begin with it.
Open lesson
Capital QuestCapital letters signal the beginning of a sentence and the special names of people, places, days, months, and titles; ordinary words stay lowercase.
Open lesson
Contraction StationA contraction joins words into a shorter form; the apostrophe stands where one or more letters were removed, while the meaning stays the same.
Open lesson
Grammar GardenA sentence blooms when its words and marks agree with its meaning: the subject controls the verb, time controls the tense, and capitals and punctuation show where ideas begin and end.
Open lesson
Homophone HeroesHomophones sound alike but carry different meanings, so the surrounding sentence and picture clue—not the sound alone—reveal the word that belongs.
Open lesson
Parts of Speech ParadeA word's part of speech is the job it performs in its sentence: nouns name, verbs show action or being, adjectives describe nouns, and adverbs modify actions or descriptions.
Open lesson
Punctuation PlanetPunctuation is part of a sentence's meaning: end marks show its intent, commas separate items, and apostrophes show missing letters or ownership.
Open lesson
Rhyme TimeRhyming words can begin differently, but their ending sounds match; listening to the end of each word reveals its rhyme family.
Open lesson Sound BlenderA spoken word appears when every letter-sound or sound chunk is blended smoothly from left to right; the same ordered sounds can be segmented to build the written word.
Open lesson
Spell CasterSpelling turns the sounds in a spoken word into letters or letter teams in the same order, then blends those parts back into the whole word.
Open lesson Spelling BeeAccurate spelling means holding a spoken word in mind and placing every sound, letter team, quiet letter, and remembered tricky part in the right order.
Open lesson Story ListenListening comprehension means holding spoken story clues in mind, connecting their order and meaning, and using them to answer without seeing the passage.
Open lesson
Story QuestReading a story means picturing it, remembering it, and working out what it means.
Open lesson Trace & RaceClear handwriting grows from starting each stroke in the right place, moving in a steady direction, and following the strokes in order.
Open lesson
Word BuilderA root carries a word's core meaning; a prefix snaps onto the front and a suffix snaps onto the end to change or refine that meaning.
Open lesson
Word MatchSynonyms share a meaning team, antonyms pull meanings in opposite directions, and near-synonyms can carry different strengths or shades of meaning.
Open lesson
Word ZapHigh-frequency words become quick to read when we recognise the whole written word, connect it to its spoken form, and practise it again after a useful gap.
Open lessonHistory
People, places and the past
Archaeologists use an artifact's material, symbols, shape, and purpose as evidence to connect it to the people and time that made it.
Open lesson Time Traveler's SuitcaseObjects are historical evidence: their materials, technology, and use help us place them in broad eras from the Stone Age to today.
Open lesson Timeline TowerA timeline orders events by when they happened: earlier events come before later events, and nearby dates help place events that are close together.
Open lessonGeography
Countries, maps and our world
Every U.S. state has one official capital city; grouping state-capital pairs by region and retrieving them in both directions makes all 50 easier to remember.
Open lesson
Country ShapesCountries have distinctive outlines that can be recognised from coastline, borders, peninsulas, islands, and overall form rather than colour or map size.
Open lesson
Flag ExplorerA flag identifies a country, and every country has a real location, capital, and story that can be connected on a world map.
Open lesson
State QuestEvery U.S. state has a fixed location inside a larger region and one capital city; region anchors and neighboring shapes make both locations and capitals easier to retrieve.
Open lesson
World ExplorerThe round world can be shown on a flat map: continents are large land regions, countries are smaller areas within them, and oceans flow between them in consistent locations.
Open lessonArt, design & music
Drawing, design and music
Design LabDesign is a series of choices that work together to express an idea.
Open lesson
Doodle LabA rough sketch carries an idea; describing what it should become brings it to life.
Open lesson Note NestOn a treble-clef staff, each higher line or space moves to the next letter name, while the note head tells how many beats the pitch lasts.
Open lessonCoding & technology
Coding, logic and digital skills
Binary LightsA binary bit switches one fixed power of two on or off; each place doubles to the left, so every whole number has one unique binary pattern.
Open lesson
Loop DanceA loop repeats instructions — you can say more with less, and the loop count times the body length tells you exactly what will happen.
Open lesson
Robot InstructionsA program is an exact sequence of instructions: a robot follows precisely what each instruction says, in order, so changing the order or a turn changes the result.
Open lesson
Type QuestAccurate touch-typing builds a smooth, repeatable rhythm; once accuracy holds, speed can rise without losing control.
Open lesson