Education startup Maths Pathway has raised $2.1 million in funding, to expand the reach of its technology platform to help kids learn maths in a more efficient, and personalised, way.
The raiseย was led by Social Ventures Australia, which contributed $1 million, and also includes contributions from existing investors, who have not been named.
Launched in 2010 by former teachers Justin Matthys and Richard Wilson, Maths Pathway provides a data-driven teaching model designed to create an individual learning experience for each student, based on their own development levels.
Speaking to StartupSmart, Matthys says the two teachers had been experimenting with some new ideas in the classroom โ both individually and together โ and came up with some strategies that โcould make a big difference for a lot of studentsโ.
The solution was โnot something anyone who is not a teacher could work outโ, he adds, and so the co-founders left their jobs and spent 18 months working out of a shed in one of their back gardens, to get a product off the ground.
โIt was that moment of thinking โif we donโt do it, whoโs going to do it?โโ
The solution is designed to help teachers leverage technology to change their classroom practice, shifting the way in which learning is structured, meaning โmaths is being taught in a far more rich andย deep wayโ, he says.
Itโs about teaching children whatever it is they need to learn next, rather than moving on to the next step when they havenโt fully grasped the concept.
โThatโs how weโre meant to teach, but making it a reality has always been really hard,โ Matthys says.
When tech is not enough
The $2.1 million in funding will allow for additional innovation and improvement of the platform, while also putting a structure in place to support further growth.
โIn order to allow new [clients] to come on board, you need to have those supports ready for them,โ he says.
But, he stresses in an industry like teaching, technology isnโt enough to change the way things are done. This is something the co-founders learnt the hard way early on.
Having built a solution they thought would work, โwe plugged it in, and it didnโtโ.
Technology is a part of the solution, but what Matthys and Wilson realised was โfor deep and consistent change to take hold, itโs more about change management and professional development than resources and toolsโ.
Now, while Maths Pathway provides tech, it also has consultants who work with schools on implementing it properly, and who can discuss how they can benefit from the product most, and what support the company can offer.
โIt takes more than tech to make such a deep change,โ Matthys says. The business does โconsiderableโ face-to-face collaboration as well.
Eyes wide open
Having made the leap from maths teacher to entrepreneur, Matthys says while it was a daunting prospect, he felt he was in a good position to do it.
โSometimes you make a big decision and you look back at the way you made that decision and think you were naive at the time.โ
With Maths Pathway, โI went in eyes wide openโ, he says, even though โI knew it probably wouldnโt workโ.
Matthys saw there was a problem he cared โvery, very deeply aboutโ.
โI could see I had a shot of being able to bring about a solution,โ he says.
โI knew that if it wasnโt me stepping in to do it, then it probably wouldnโt happen.โ
Equally, while he knew there would be personal time and financial costs, he notes he was โ and is โ in a privileged position.
โIโm an Australian with a family who wonโt let me starve to death โฆ I wonโt have to sleep outside,โ he says.
โMost people in the world donโt have that safety net and that support network,โ he adds.
It was also the passion Matthys has for the project that has made it all worthwhile.
โIf you donโt believe in it, donโt do it, because itโs bloody hard,โ he says.
โYou have to have a bigger purpose โ a servant mentality rather than a hero complexย โ or it will just wear you down,โ he adds.
NOW READ:ย Code Like a Girl secures $60,000 grant to take its coding classes for girls on the road
Comments