Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Clockwise is an iOS educational app for children with a very clear core goal: helping kids learn to read analog/hand clocks. It is not a comprehensive math curriculum, but rather focused practice around the practical life skill of “understanding clocks, setting the hands, and identifying the time.” The website shows an App Store rating of 4.8/5 and more than 150,000 downloads, but it does not provide details on the rating source or how the statistics are calculated.
The app offers two game modes. The first is “Set the Clock,” where children see a digital time such as “3:30” and then drag the hour and minute hands into place. The second is “Pick the Right Time,” where children look at an analog clock and choose the correct digital time from multiple options. The former trains time visualization and hand positioning, while the latter builds clock-reading recognition skills, making the two modes complementary. It also offers 6 difficulty levels and lets users choose the number of practice questions, making it suitable for gradually progressing based on a child’s attention span and level of mastery.
In terms of language support, Clockwise supports English, French, German, Dutch, and Italian, and includes AI voice guidance. This makes it friendly for multilingual families or international school settings, though the current text does not indicate Chinese support.
Clockwise uses a one-time purchase model, with all difficulty levels and features unlocked through the Apple App Store. There are no subscriptions or hidden fees, and it supports use across multiple devices under the same Apple ID as well as Family Sharing in available regions. The specific price is not disclosed on the website. In terms of privacy, the app claims to have no ads, collect or transmit no personal data, use no third-party analytics, and work fully offline, which is a clear plus for a children’s app.
Its strengths are a focused learning goal, simple interactions, an appropriate level of gamification for younger children, and reduced parental concerns thanks to no ads and offline use. The one-time payment model is also more straightforward than a subscription. Its limitations are that the platform appears to be iOS only, with no Android or web version; Chinese is not supported; and claims such as a “95% success rate” and “average learning time of two weeks” do not include methodological details, so they should not be treated as rigorous educational outcome certification. In addition, it only addresses reading analog clocks and is not suitable as a complete math curriculum.
Clockwise is suitable for children around ages 5–8 who are learning the concept of time, as well as for parent-led after-school practice, elementary classroom exercises, and homeschool settings. The text does not clarify website access or App Store download availability for users in China, so actual usability will depend on local network conditions and the region of the user’s Apple account.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on getclockwise.app official site.
getclockwise.app is an Unknown Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach getclockwise.app directly.