How to Help Your Child with Math at Home — Ontario Parent Guide (2026)
If your child is struggling with math, you’re not alone. Many Ontario parents feel uncertain about how to help — especially since the curriculum has changed. This guide provides practical, evidence-based strategies you can start using today.
Why Many Ontario Kids Fall Behind in Math
The Ontario math curriculum covers five core strands: Number Sense, Algebra, Measurement, Geometry, and Data & Probability. Students are expected to master all five every year from Grade 1 through 9.
The challenge? Classrooms have 25+ students with different learning speeds. Teachers move at the pace of the curriculum, not the pace of your child. When a concept doesn’t click — like fractions in Grade 4 or integers in Grade 7 — the gap compounds every year.
Research from EQAO shows that only about 50% of Grade 6 students meet the provincial math standard. This means half of Ontario kids need extra support outside the classroom.
Strategy 1: Daily Practice (15 Minutes Makes a Difference)
The single most effective thing you can do is establish a daily math practice routine. Studies consistently show that distributed practice — short daily sessions — outperforms long weekly cramming sessions.
Here’s what 15 minutes looks like:
- 5 minutes: Review yesterday’s mistakes
- 5 minutes: Practice current topic (e.g., multiplication facts)
- 5 minutes: Try a challenge problem from the next level
Platforms like MapleMath are designed around this 15-minute model, with adaptive questions that adjust to your child’s level automatically.
Strategy 2: Focus on the Ontario Curriculum Strands
Don’t waste time on random worksheets from American websites. Ontario’s math curriculum is specific, and what your child needs to learn in Grade 4 is different from Grade 4 in Texas or California.
The five Ontario math strands are:
- Number Sense and Numeration — counting, operations, fractions, decimals
- Algebra (Patterning) — patterns, variables, equations
- Measurement — length, area, volume, time
- Geometry and Spatial Sense — shapes, angles, transformations
- Data Management and Probability — graphs, surveys, chance
When choosing practice materials, make sure they cover all five strands — not just number sense. Browse Grade 4 Ontario curriculum topics →
Strategy 3: Make Mistakes Safe
Math anxiety is real, and it starts early. If your child gets upset when they answer incorrectly, they’ll avoid challenge — which is exactly when learning happens.
What to say:
- “That’s interesting — can you walk me through your thinking?”
- “You’re really close. What if you tried it this way?”
- “Making mistakes is how your brain grows. Let’s figure this out together.”
Adaptive platforms help here because they adjust difficulty in real time — your child is always working at the edge of their ability, not too easy (boring) and not too hard (frustrating).
Strategy 4: Connect Math to Real Life
Math feels abstract to kids until you connect it to their world:
- Grocery shopping: “We need 3 bags of apples at $4.50 each. What’s the total?”
- Cooking: “The recipe calls for ¾ cup, but we want to double it. How much do we need?”
- Sports: “You scored 3 goals in 5 games. What’s your scoring rate?”
- Allowance: “If you save $5 per week, how many weeks until you can buy a $45 game?”
Strategy 5: Prepare for EQAO Early
Ontario students are assessed by EQAO in Grades 3, 6, and 9. These standardized assessments cover all curriculum strands and provide an objective measure of your child’s math skills.
The best EQAO preparation isn’t last-minute cramming — it’s consistent practice throughout the year. If your child practises regularly with curriculum-aligned questions, the EQAO assessment is just another day.
Learn more about EQAO preparation →
What About Tutoring vs. Online Practice?
Tutoring is valuable but expensive ($40–$80/hour in Ontario). For many families, the cost of weekly tutoring ($200+/month) is prohibitive.
AI-powered practice platforms offer a middle ground:
- Adaptive difficulty (like a tutor adjusting to your child)
- Instant feedback and explanations
- Available 24/7 (practice at 7am or 9pm — whenever works)
- Fraction of the cost ($12–$19/month)
The ideal approach is a combination: daily adaptive practice at home, with a tutor for specific topics where your child is deeply stuck.
Grade-by-Grade Quick Tips
Grades 1–3: Build Number Fluency
Focus on counting, basic addition/subtraction facts, and understanding quantities. Use manipulatives (blocks, coins, cereal). Grade 1 | Grade 2 | Grade 3
Grades 4–6: Master Operations & Fractions
This is where many kids fall behind. Multiplication tables, fraction concepts, and multi-step problems need consistent practice. Grade 4 | Grade 5 | Grade 6
Grades 7–9: Prepare for High School
Algebra, proportional reasoning, and the Pythagorean theorem become essential. Grade 9 is now de-streamed (MTH1W), so all students take the same course. Grade 7 | Grade 8 | Grade 9
Start Today
You don’t need to be a math expert to help your child succeed. You just need consistency: 15 minutes a day with the right material makes a measurable difference within weeks.
Try MapleMath free for 7 days → — adaptive math practice aligned to the Ontario curriculum for Grades 1–9.