| Miro |
Unlike Miro’s general-purpose boards, Math Whiteboard is purpose-built for mathematics, offering built-in graphing and a computer algebra system. It’s completely free for educators and students, making it far more accessible for classrooms that only need math-focused collaboration rather than broad business brainstorming features. |
| Microsoft Whiteboard |
Math Whiteboard provides specialized math tools such as sliders, symbolic algebra, and structured equation handling, which Microsoft Whiteboard lacks natively. Teachers can move seamlessly between handwritten math and graphs without relying on third-party integrations, making it more practical for structured math lessons. |
| Explain Everything |
While Explain Everything focuses heavily on multimedia presentations, Math Whiteboard centers on mathematical accuracy with CAS capabilities and dynamic graphing. It’s also free, whereas Explain Everything requires a paid subscription for full collaboration features, giving math educators a cost-effective alternative. |
| Whiteboard.chat |
Math Whiteboard goes deeper into math instruction with algebraic computation and graphing tools built in. Whiteboard.chat emphasizes classroom management and monitoring, but Math Whiteboard offers stronger mathematical modeling and symbolic manipulation features for higher-level math courses. |
| Bitpaper |
Compared to Bitpaper’s clean but general whiteboard interface, Math Whiteboard includes an integrated computer algebra system and dynamic math sliders. Educators teaching algebra, precalculus, or calculus benefit from built-in computation rather than relying solely on drawing and external calculators. |