
✏️ Type It
Students type the answer for speed and accuracy.
Flash Card Frenzy turns quick math fact practice into useful classroom insight — so you can see who is growing, which facts are slowing students down, and where to focus next.



Flash Card Frenzy started in a special education classroom and grew into a whole-class practice routine. Students used reference charts when needed, classmates shouted hints, and everyone had to give a number and keep moving.
Now the same high-energy routine is online, with the added benefit of student progress data, weak facts, slow facts, and teacher-friendly reports.
Read the Story →
Each mode supports a different type of practice, from fast recall to visual support.

Students type the answer for speed and accuracy.

Quick tap answers with immediate feedback.

Visual support to build patterns and confidence.

Use hops to solve, visualize, and practice addition or subtraction.

Project two teams side-by-side on the classroom screen. Students race to answer their own questions, build streaks, and rack up points — perfect for Friday warm-ups, end-of-unit review, or any time you want the whole room locked in.
| Student | Game Type | Time | Score | Accuracy | Completed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alex Johnson | Type It | 2 min | 24 | 92% | May 12, 2:15 PM |
| Emma Davis | Multiple Choice | 2 min | 21 | 88% | May 12, 1:58 PM |
| Liam Brown | Chart | 2 min | 23 | 96% | May 12, 1:45 PM |
| Olivia Smith | Number Line | 2 min | 19 | 76% | May 12, 1:32 PM |
| Noah Wilson | Type It | 2 min | 25 | 100% | May 12, 1:20 PM |
The dashboard is already useful for early beta testing, and the roadmap is focused on making it easier to use with real classes. It's completely free while in beta.
Exploring new ways to easily add your roster.
Build targeted decks from weak facts, operations, or classroom needs.
Project two teams side-by-side on the classroom screen. Students race to answer, streaks build, and the score updates in real time — perfect for Friday warm-ups or end-of-unit review.
Adjust goals and thresholds so students can compete at the right level.
Expand beyond math facts into vocabulary, science facts, and fast recall practice.
Print or save quick progress snapshots for conferences, groups, or planning.
A small group of teachers are testing Flash Card Frenzy, trying it with real students, and giving feedback on what should come next.