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The Math Page is a free online math course website for self-learners. The scraped text shows that its courses cover “Arithmetic through Calculus,” meaning topics from arithmetic to calculus. This page focuses on its plane geometry course, based on Book I of Euclid’s Elements, with the Pythagorean theorem as a major concluding topic. Overall, it feels more like a classic textbook-style web course than a modern platform-based online class.
The geometry course is fairly complete in structure. It begins with “Geometry: The Study of Shapes,” “Introduction to Logic,” “Hypothesis and Conclusion,” “Necessary and Sufficient,” and “Valid Arguments,” then moves into definitions, postulates, axioms, or common notions. It then proceeds proposition by proposition: constructing an equilateral triangle, making line segments equal, triangle congruence, isosceles triangles, proof by contradiction, angle bisectors, perpendicular lines, parallel line theory, the sum of angles in a triangle, parallelograms, equal areas, constructing squares, and finally Proposition 47, the Pythagorean theorem, along with its converse. The text does not indicate live classes, recorded video lessons, or 1-on-1 tutoring, so it appears to be primarily an online text course with exercise materials.
The page clearly states “Free Online Math Courses,” so its pricing advantage is obvious. No subscription, individual course purchase, or payment method information was found. There is also no evidence of accreditation, completion certificates, or exam services. As for instructors, only Copyright © 2021 Lawrence Spector and contact emails such as [email protected] are visible, with no fuller teacher biography or institutional background disclosed.
Its strengths are that it is free and clearly structured, making it especially suitable for learners who want to understand Euclidean geometry and the logic of mathematical proof. The course progresses proposition by proposition, helping students build a rigorous reasoning framework from postulates to theorems. The drawbacks are also clear: the scraped content does not show interactive exercises, automatic grading, learning path tracking, video explanations, or community support. Its English text and classical proof style may also be less friendly for younger learners or students with weaker foundations.
It is better suited to middle school students, pre-university students, math enthusiasts, and teachers who need a reference for the structure of Euclidean geometry—provided they have a certain level of English reading ability and are willing to learn independently through text. Access from China cannot be determined from the text and is marked as unknown. Since the course is free, there is currently no payment-related barrier noted. If you need Chinese explanations, video courses, or localized services, alternatives such as Khan Academy, Brilliant, or foundational math courses on XuetangX and China University MOOC may be worth considering.
⚠ 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 themathpage.com official site.
themathpage.com is an Unknown Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach themathpage.com directly.