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The Number Kingdom: Transforming Primary Math Thro

place India

Think. Solve. Grow.

Traditional mathematics teaching often leaves primary students feeling anxious and disconnected. This innovation solves that by turning core mathematical operations into an engaging, high-quality superhero story set in the Himalayas. By framing arithmetic concepts as relatable superpowers, it eliminates learning fear and helps young students naturally think, solve, and grow.

Overview

Information on this page is provided by the innovator and has not been evaluated by HundrED.

Updated July 2026
Created by

Government Primary School, Phodong Gumpa

2026

Established

1

Countries
Students lower
Target group
The ultimate hope is to shift primary education away from rigid, fear-inducing methods of teaching mathematics and move toward an intuitive, story-driven approach. By transforming abstract numbers into relatable characters, this innovation aims to entirely eliminate math anxiety in young learners. The goal is to see classrooms globally where students actively enjoy problem-solving, develop strong foundational numeracy through creative thinking, and confidently embrace mathematics as a tool that helps them understand and improve the world around them.

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

This innovation was created to remove the widespread fear and anxiety primary school students face when learning mathematics. Traditional methods often rely on rote memorization, making abstract concepts feel intimidating. By transforming arithmetic operations into an original, highly engaging superhero narrative, the goal was to make foundational learning accessible, joyful, and deeply intuitive, ensuring no student is left behind.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

In practice, this innovation blends high-quality digital animation with local cultural storytelling to bring numbers to life. Viewers see the "Number Kingdom" set against a beautiful Himalayan backdrop, where core arithmetic operations are introduced as animated superhero characters living in the "House of Mathematics."
​Father Mathematics guides the journey as a wise mentor.
​Brother Addition (+), Brother Subtraction (-), Sister Multiplication (\times), and Sister Division (\div) use their distinct superhero powers to help local villagers solve everyday real-world math problems, like balancing and sharing harvests.
​Mother Zero appears as a shining guardian angel, demonstrating the profound mathematical concept of place value by standing next to numbers to make them ten times stronger.
​In a classroom setting, students don't just memorize formulas; they visualize these characters, removing learning anxiety and turning problem-solving into a collaborative, heroic adventure.

How has it been spreading?

This innovation has been implemented directly at Government Primary School, Phodong Gumpa, in North Sikkim, where it serves as a core foundational learning tool for primary students. By integrating the video and its superhero character framework into daily classroom lessons, the concept has successfully engaged local students and reduced mathematics anxiety.
​To expand its reach globally and make it accessible to educators worldwide, the video is being shared as an open digital resource on YouTube. This allows teachers from any region to adopt the "Number Kingdom" storytelling methodology to make math joyful and intuitive in their own classrooms.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

To implement this innovation in your classroom, follow these simple steps:
​Watch the Video: Show the animated "Superpower Family of Father Mathematics" video to your primary students to introduce the characters and the Number Kingdom setting.
​Adopt the Character Framework: When teaching basic operations, refer to plus as "Brother Addition," minus as "Brother Subtraction," multiply as "Sister Multiplication," and divide as "Sister Division" to keep the story alive.
​Use Story-Driven Problems: Reframe standard math problems as storytelling challenges (e.g., helping villagers share or balance their harvests fairly).
​Visualize Place Value: Use the concept of "Mother Zero" as a guardian angel standing next to numbers to visually demonstrate how they instantly become ten times stronger.

Implementation steps

Classroom Storytelling Integration
Introduce the "Superpower Family of Father Mathematics" video to students to establish the narrative. Next, map daily arithmetic lessons directly to the character personas (e.g., using Brother Addition or Mother Zero to visualize place value). Finally, present standard math equations as collaborative story challenges where students help the characters restore balance to the Number Kingdom.