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REBECCA Ginger grew up on the estate so rough that it inspired Trainspotting, where shooting up heroin in school toilets and bringing a machete to class were normal.

And just like Ewan McGregor’s character Renton in the dark film about Edinburgh’s seedy underbelly, 51-year-old Rebecca escaped for a new life. 

Rebecca grew up "feeling stupid" - but now she runs the UK’s leading online maths teaching program
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Rebecca grew up "feeling stupid" - but now she runs the UK’s leading online maths teaching programCredit: Supplied
Her daughter Romy, pictured, sparked the business idea after struggling with maths at school
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Her daughter Romy, pictured, sparked the business idea after struggling with maths at schoolCredit: Supplied

Now, she is turning over up to £200,000-a-year running the UK’s leading online maths teaching program, . 

Born and raised in Edinburgh, Rebecca went to school in the Eighties at the time of the Scottish Teachers Strike, meaning she only went in on Mondays and Fridays. 

She missed around two years worth of lessons - all while suffering with undiagnosed dyslexia, dyscalculia and maths anxiety.

“Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday we were roaming the streets - and everyone was getting into a lot of trouble,” she exclusively tells Fabulous for Bossing It

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“I thought it was normal when I was going through it - and I was in the bottom set with all of the bad boys.

“I felt like I was worthless. 

“Even when I was working, I felt so stupid.”

Despite her dyslexia and struggling with numbers, Rebecca went on to have a successful career as one of MTV’s top directors.

She landed this by working as an intern for free for two years at 24-years-old while claiming benefits to stay afloat in London

She soon became the creator and director of channel’s most successful and long running show, Dirty Sanchez.

But when her children started struggling with maths at school and teachers said her daughter Romy, now 18, “won’t pass an exam in her life”, Rebecca realised a career in media wasn’t her calling. 

Turning the tide

"I taught my eldest, Jago, 20, using our secret technique," she explains. "But since he was already good at maths, I didn't think much of it.

"Then I repeated the technique with Romy, who really struggled with maths aged eight.

"It wasn't until my youngest, Indiana, now 15, was eight-years-old, and I had to teach him maths that I truly began to believe that it could work so effectively for other children."

Rebecca's Top 5 Business Tips

Fables World founder Rebecca shared her top five tips for other women looking to set up their own business...

  1. Read Think and Grow Rich, a self-help book by Napoleon Hill
  2. Don't quit your day job straight away - run your business alongside employment until the time is right
  3. Don't get investment - it's better to gamble your own money than someone else's
  4. Find somebody to back you that you can also bounce information and ideas off
  5. Meditate - if you can calm yourself down when things are stressful, you can think clearer and move forward

Thanks to Rebecca's tutoring, Romy shot from the bottom to the top of her maths class in a year.

This was done by tapping into her children's love of stories to unlock visual learning when practising times tables and divisions. 

Soon enough, the mum-of-three turned her skill at making maths easy into a business that has made a huge difference to thousands of children’s lives.  

“I was a successful producer but I didn’t think I could ever set up my own business,” she says. 

"I couldn’t watch all of these kids struggle at maths because I wanted to show them they’re not stupid," Rebecca says
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"I couldn’t watch all of these kids struggle at maths because I wanted to show them they’re not stupid," Rebecca saysCredit: Supplied

“But it was like this social obligation. 

“I couldn’t watch all of these kids struggle at maths because I wanted to show them they’re not stupid. 

“They just weren’t taught in a way that made sense to them.”

A visual learning method is the key to Fables World's success, with Rebecca teaching children mathematics with cartoons.

Secret weapon

The entrepreneur set up Fables World, then known as Table Fables, in 2017 by remortgaging her house. 

She relied heavily on the help of her brother John, who she refers to as her “secret weapon”.

“He does all the technical stuff behind the scenes,” she says. 

We did it all on a shoestring budget - we clawed our way here. But we survived because it works

Rebecca Ginger

“John helped me set the business up for free - and I can’t tell you how many sleepless nights I had at the beginning.

“I was like, ‘not only am I wasting my brother’s time, money and energy, but we’re going to lose our house’. "

'Clawed our way here'

“We did it all on a shoestring budget - we clawed our way here," Rebecca adds.

“But we survived because it works.”

The business relaunched as Fables World last year and now turns over anywhere between £150,000 to £200,000-a-year. 

It was initially set up for children with dyslexia, dyscalculia, maths anxiety or reluctant learning from four to 14-years-old. 

I felt like I was worthless. Even when I was working, I felt so stupid

Rebecca Ginger

But through countless hours of research in school classrooms and with siblings joining in the fun during sessions, Rebecca discovered her fun method of teaching works for all children - no matter what their learning style.

To date, over 10,000 parents have used Fables World to help their children learn maths where traditional teaching methods have failed.

It’s not just for children, though - plenty of adults use the service too, Rebecca says. 

The tutoring entrepreneur even teaches prisoners, and she says her childhood on the rough estate means she’s not scared of working with anyone. 

Revolutionising maths

Recalling funny characters and stories is more accessible than numbers, research has found.

That’s why Fables World uses funny cartoons that “effortlessly” show children how to add and subtract - rather than just showing them numbers on a plain piece of paper.

Fables World uses funny cartoons that “effortlessly” show children how to add and subtract
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Fables World uses funny cartoons that “effortlessly” show children how to add and subtractCredit: Supplied

“Our human brains are hardwired to remember stories - the ruder the better,” Rebecca says.

What's more, she claims that getting better at maths boosts kids’ scores across all subjects. 

“We transform a kid's maths and then all their other subjects improve - and so does their confidence,” she says. 

A 12-Month subscriptions start from £60 a year - a far cry from the £50 per session Rebecca knows some parents pay for tuition.

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You can also try a seven day free-trial and there's a 100% guarantee or your money back.

However, Rebecca says nobody has ever claimed that thanks to how well her system works.

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