DragonBox: A beautiful and fun way to explore algebra concepts

DragonBox Algebra 12+ algebra app

In our house, math had only been interesting, for a long time, to me. During her years in public school, Ashar considered math somewhere between, you know, a root canal and Brussels sprouts on her list of dislikes.

Disclosure: In exchange for the honest review of our experience which appears in this post, our family was offered the DragonBox Algebra 12+ app download for free, but we’d already chosen to purchase the game last year! We were compensated for our time completing the review, but all fun had was ours.

In homeschooling, though, I think I’ve been able to show Ashar something cool about “math” – that it’s not just (or, in my opinion, even mostly) about calculation.

When I can show her how the true concepts behind “school math” appear in ways that intersect with her day-to-day life, well, that’s what I’m going for! And as part of my personal quest to show people that you can unschool math, and that math can be cool, I often check out any “math stuff” that comes down the pike.

As part of that, last year, we starting playing around with an app called DragonBox Algebra. Ashar got into it and used it pretty heavily, and this year, when it happened to come up as an option for us to review, she said, “HEY! We did that! Let’s talk about it!”

DragonBox Algebra 12+ algebra app

How can dragons and boxes teach the concepts of algebra?

There are 10 chapters in the DragonBox Algebra 12+ app, each with a different dragon you’re to feed and grow throughout that chapter’s 20 to 30 levels, each consisting of a problem solved in stages like the one you see Ashar’s work for above. While later problems in each chapter look like this one, with numbers and letters, earlier problems feature creatures in place of letter variables and dice-style “pips” in place of numbers.

“It’s a mind-thinking game,” Ashar described it. And she’s right. This is what I love about real math: It’s so much more than computation. It’s about logic and understanding how numbers play with each other.

Want to see it in action? Check out developer We Want To Know‘s trailer for the game here.

For us, solving the problems as they come up in DragonBox, and talking about concepts like “balance” in equations and what zero really means, is all we need. That said, if you’re interested in using DragonBox Algebra (or the other DragonBox apps) in a more formal way, the company offers a pretty huge set of teacher resources, including worksheets and more.

Learning games and unschooling high school math

“To me, it’s relaxing, because you get to figure out what goes with what and how to do it, and if it doesn’t work, you can always go back and fix it,” Ashar said.

THAT. That is SO MUCH BETTER than worksheets and “wrong answers” and grades, to me. Life and math aren’t about “getting it right the first time.” They’re about figuring out how things work and trying them over and over until you get it just right.

I admit, last year, when I heard about DragonBox through things like this Forbes artice, I was a little skeptical. Oh, I thought it would be a good algebra app, for sure. (After all, among other things, the graphics are phenomenal, which is a big plus for us.)

But I tend to have a real hangup about “educational games.” I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Math with pigs and cookies is still math, right? Kids aren’t dumb, and you’re not getting anything past them. In fact, that’s one thing about the DragonBox marketing that surprised me: It’s actually billed as a sneaky way to teach algebra, but I bet most kids can figure that out on their own!

Anyway, I’m glad I let go of that hangup enough to try this app out. Yes, it’s an “educational game,” to be sure. But it is also just plain cool.

As unschoolers, it isn’t our style to sit down and do math worksheets. It’s also not our style to say, “Oh, you should play a math game.”

But it IS our style to strew a lot of resources for Ashar, and whether she’s playing DragonBox or Plague, Inc. or Dragonville or Marvel Champions or Batman: Arkham Origins, I’m sure she’s engaging her brain and I have a ton of fun when we can check out new apps together. I’m glad DragonBox is part of our suite of fun!

Read more

Interested in learning more about “how we learn” and what we do with video games and real-world math? You might want to check out some other Unschool Rules posts on the following topics:

How you can get DragonBox

DragonBox Algebra 12+ is available both for iOS devices and Android.

You should definitely also check out their other products, too. DragonBox Elements is a geometry-based game we also have been playing for months; that’s available for iOS here and for Android here.

And there’s a version of DragonBox Algebra 5+, aimed at slightly younger learners but still fun for older kids, also available on iOS and Android devices.

Finally, DragonBox is giving away a total of 100 people access to the web-based versions of the algebra and geometry apps. (No mobile device is necessary for these!) This is valid for anyone in the world. Enter to win in the widget below!

And don’t forget to check out DragonBox on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube for more information!

Unschooling: Our March 2015 adventures

Sarah's 15th birthday celebration included this new friend, "Snowy," a white bear that matches two others we have, Wudge and Fudge.

Ashar’s 15th birthday celebration included this new friend, “Snowy,” a white bear that matches two others we have, Wudge and Fudge.

Wow! Things that happened in March: Ashar turned 15, we celebrated my mom’s 80th birthday with a huge surprise party, we confirmed a huge trip for this fall, we went to a Comic-Con, and, in a technical sense, Ashar finished the attendance requirements to complete her freshman year of high school. Whew? So anyway, with that said, we had a pretty busy month and hopefully this wrapup will be a good way to show some of the highlights!

(If this is your first time catching our month-in-review posts, welcome! Check out our archive of previous wrapups here for some more info on why we take this approach to documenting some of our unschooling learning adventures.)

A random dinner in Hershey. The better photos are the ones in which we're making dumb faces, but it's the internet and I don't want to embarrass Ashar too much.

A random dinner in Hershey. The better photos are the ones in which we’re making dumb faces, but it’s the internet and I don’t want to embarrass Ashar too much.

Books

Disclosure: This post has some affiliate links. I only link to things we legitimately use and recommend, so if you see such a link, it's because we really do believe in the book or item!
A side note: Lest you think we just never read, I should add that Ashar has a SUPER completist approach to books; it’s hard for her to start a new one while she’s in the middle of another.

And this book she’s reading, it’s weighty. She reads for sometimes an hour or more before bed every night, and she’s diligently plowing through it, but MAN. I’m actually excited for her to finish it so she can take on something lighter!

A big thing this month was celebrating my mom's 80th birthday. That's her in the center, with me at right and the rest of my sisters around her. We love you, Mom!

A big thing this month was celebrating my mom’s 80th birthday. That’s her in the center, with me at right and the rest of my sisters around her. We love you, Mom!

Movies and TV

Video games

Timeline has been THE BIGGEST hit for us. Here's Ashar with all of the Inventions cards in order from earliest to latest. Totally fun way to put some history in context.

Timeline has been THE BIGGEST hit for us. Here’s Ashar with all of the Inventions cards in order from earliest to latest. Totally fun way to put some history in context.

Board and card games

  • Monty Python Fluxx
  • Star Fluxx (These two games are HILARIOUS fun and awesome. Great for creative thinking.)
  • Poker
  • Blackjack
  • Texas Hold ‘Em
  • Timeline: Inventions
  • Timeline: American History
  • Timeline: Americana (We saw a demo of and picked up the first of these games at the Central Pennsylvania Comic-Con, and it was one of the best impulse purchases I’ve ever made. We have had a ton of fun figuring out what happened when. Even history-major Kaitlyn is often stumped, and it’s cool to see what Ashar knows!)
  • Sequence

This was actually a huge thing we added into our family time in March; we go in cycles on our board and table gaming, and last month we got some new games and really spent a lot of time trying them out.

Sarah's 4-H club trip to the Wolf Sanctuary was extra-fun because one of her close friends, who also went to Comic-Con with her, was there.

Ashar’s 4-H club trip to the Wolf Sanctuary was extra-fun because one of her close friends, who also went to Comic-Con with her, was there.

Places, projects and odds and ends of stuff we’ve talked about/read/geeked out over

    This is Ashar and our friend Swoops the Owl with an actual live owl at ZooAmerica in Hershey.

    This is Ashar and our friend Swoops the Owl with an actual live owl at ZooAmerica in Hershey.

  • ZooAmerica in Hershey: Kaitlyn and Ashar spent one of his days off here while I was working. They also did the “designed for little kids but kind of a Central Pennsylvania requisite” tour of Chocolate World. Of note at ZooAmerica, Ashar was most interested in learning more about a bird called the Gambel’s Quail, a neat desert bird with a cool top feather. We intend to see some of them…
  • … when we drive to Arizona this October for the Free to Be unschooling conference!! This is a huge, huge, huge deal for us and I’m so excited to hang out with my unschooling friends from around the country and to have Ashar get a chance to spend time with her unschooling friends. Also, we’re driving across the country and taking a two-week vacation, so that’s cool even without the conference!
  • Central PA ComicCon: We went to the first day of this as a group, then Ashar went back on the second day with a good friend of hers and the friend’s boyfriend. They had a blast!
  • Sometimes you buy a $20 prom gown on clearance. Just because you can. What of it?

    Sometimes you buy a $20 prom gown on clearance. Just because you can. What of it?

  • We had a surprise 80th birthday party for my mom, with family from Pennsylvania and New Jersey, friends from various groups she’s been part of and some other longtime family friends. We also had a nice family dinner out at Red Lobster on the actual date of Mom’s birthday to celebrate.
  • Ashar’s 15th birthday: Two parts to this. First, for her birthday, Ashar got to take over our house’s master bedroom and bath, and most of her gifts were things to convert this into a Batman-themed “Batcave.” We also went to our favorite Japanese restaurant, Masa, for dinner, during which we talked about where the Bahamas are, the meaning of their flag, what mochi is and more. (The Bahamas thing came after Ashar received birthday wishes from there on our Unschool Rules Facebook page!
  • Wolf Sanctuary: Ashar took her fourth (we think) trip to this cool place with Chris as part of a field trip with the Wildlife Watchers 4-H Club.
  • Yum: We talked about what foods we’d like to make into potato chip flavors as part of the Lay’s Do Us A Flavor challenge. I went with a chicken-bacon-ranch combo; Ashar wanted something like a 10-cheese chip.
  • Cool animal things: How the penguin got its waddle and why we don’t want to feed bread to the ducks and Species in Pieces (an awesome look at endangered species that led to talks about ecology, geography, development, programming and more) were on our list this month.
  • Vroom: This look at James Bond’s cars through the years is super-cool.
Sarah's Batman bed set was a huge hit!

Ashar’s Batman bed set was a huge hit!

So what’s new with your family this month? Drop me a comment! I love hearing from all my “blog friends!”