Examen de sécurité
Prix et Certifications
À propos
Prodigy Math is a globally available, highly engaging educational platform designed to make math practice fun for students in Grades 1 through 8 (ages 6–14). Available across iOS, Android, and web browsers, Prodigy transforms a traditionally passive learning experience into an immersive, fantasy-style adventure game. The platform’s core mission is to align rigorous curriculum with highly motivational gameplay, addressing learning needs across major curricula including Common Core and TEKS. The game is set in a colorful virtual world where students play as customizable wizards. The central mechanism of play, and the driver of the adaptive learning, is the Math Battle. To progress in the game, defeat monsters, and earn rewards, players must correctly answer curriculum-aligned math problems. Prodigy utilizes an advanced, adaptive algorithm that constantly assesses a student’s progress and automatically adjusts the difficulty and content of the math questions in real-time. This ensures that each student is consistently challenged at their specific skill level, which, as the AI Safety Review notes, keeps the educational content risk low and age-appropriate. Teachers and parents are provided with dashboards to monitor progress, identify learning gaps, and assign specific educational content to supplement classroom instruction or homework. The game covers a vast array of mathematical topics including number sense, geometry, measurement, and algebra fundamentals, all wrapped in a motivating role-playing game format. However, the product is built on a freemium business model that has generated significant public debate and safety concerns, which parents should be aware of. While the core math content is accessible for free, the game heavily promotes a Premium membership that unlocks non-essential, cosmetic, and convenience features within the virtual world. The difference between the free and paid experience is visually and socially distinct: the free version (Subscription Required: No) bombards children with frequent advertisements and in-game upsells. Examples of the emotionally manipulative tactics cited in public complaints include: children without a Premium membership literally having their avatars walk in dirt, while Premium members can ride around on virtual clouds or mounts. Another key tactic involves 'treasure boxes' where free users are presented with a sparkly box, only to be blocked and shown an ad when attempting to open it, then forced to settle for a 'plain wooden one.' The platform also features social, social media-style elements like 'Wizard Watch,' which reports on items purchased by other players, generating peer pressure to buy memberships for character customization. These aggressive monetization tactics have led to a high level of scrutiny from child safety and advocacy groups. In February 2021, a formal complaint was filed with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) alleging that Prodigy’s freemium model exploits children’s emotions, distracts them from the learning process, and pressures parents into purchasing subscriptions that can cost up to $120 per child per year. Critics argue that this constant upselling and the inherent creation of a 'lesser' status for non-paying users undermines the educational goal, teaching children to be consumers rather than learners, and creating equity issues where children feel inferior based on their parents' ability to pay. Furthermore, while the educational content risk is considered low, the platform's data and privacy practices are noted as an area of concern. The app collects user data, as indicated by the Privacy column (Tracking: Yes), which is a necessity for its adaptive algorithm and parental monitoring features. However, the AI Safety Review shows a lack of detailed, independent information regarding the platform's specific data security protocols and privacy standards. Parents are advised to thoroughly review the app's privacy policy to understand how their child's data is collected and used, particularly given the aggressive marketing embedded in the product's design. The platform’s low Star rating of 2 suggests that users and reviewers are significantly impacted by these commercial practices, despite the underlying quality of the math curriculum and the engaging nature of the game. Prodigy Math, therefore, requires significant parental oversight and engagement to ensure the focus remains purely on education, mitigating the distracting and potentially manipulative effects of the integrated sales environment. Its global availability on iOS/Android makes it highly accessible, but the controversy surrounding its monetization model remains the primary factor for parental consideration. Prodigy Math should be reviewed in real family use before recommendation. Test first-session onboarding, age fit (1–8), data collection prompts, and monetization flows. Verify whether core tasks remain usable with limited connectivity, whether navigation is predictable for children, and whether adult controls are easy to find. Keep short supervised sessions and document where children need support. Re-check links and policy pages regularly because store listings and business models can change over time.
Critères
Notre évaluation repose sur vie privée, adéquation à l'âge et valeur pédagogique.