Host a screening and use our toolkit to spark real conversations about what math could be. At your school, library, workplace, or living room—this story belongs everywhere and to everyone.

Math isn’t just a school subject. It’s how we make sense of the world.
It’s a language, a tool for understanding and questioning, a path to opportunity, and an invitation to wonder. But for too long, a narrow story about who math is for has shut too many people out—and left the power to fully participate in our world to a select few.
Together, we’re flipping that script and building a future where math belongs to everyone.
Our film is sparking bold new conversations about:
WHAT MATH IS:
A human language for understanding the world.WHO MATH IS FOR:
Everyone. Not just so-called “math people.”WHAT MATH UNLOCKS:
Opportunity, agency, power, and civic health.
Ready to change the story of math?
Your experience with math—struggles, breakthroughs, or questions—can help others feel seen. Share your story to help rewrite the narrative about who math is for and why it matters. Post it on social media, start a dinner table conversation, or send it to us directly.
Whether you’re a parent, teacher, policymaker, or lifelong learner, there’s a place for you in this conversation. Get updates and resources to support your math journey.
From budgeting and healthcare to voting, climate change and navigating the media, math helps us ask better questions, spot patterns, and make informed decisions.
Like reading and writing, math literacy is a life skill. It’s a universal language that transcends politics and culture, connecting us through reason, empathy, and shared understanding.
In today’s complex world, math is a foundational tool—for individuals, families, professionals, and communities alike. It empowers us to participate fully in public life, to lead with clarity, and to imagine more just, informed futures.
Math is everywhere—and it belongs to all of us.
In March, we launched a powerful wave of momentum: 314+ community screenings across all 50 states—from SXSW EDU in Austin, to the National Museum of Math in New York City, to The Black Archives in Miami. The movement has grown to more than 600 screenings worldwide—across a dozen countries and counting.
Why 314? It was a nod to Pi (3.14): a symbol of math’s infinite possibilities and a fitting way to launch a movement built on empowerment, community, and change.
We’re just getting started. With new screenings, civic engagement, and partnerships on the horizon, the conversation is growing—and we need you. Whether you host a screening, start a dialogue, or simply share the film, there’s a place for everyone in building a global movement for math literacy.