Grade 6 Math in Ontario — Curriculum, EQAO Prep & What Parents Should Know
Grade 6 is one of the most demanding years in Ontario math. The curriculum introduces ratios, percentages, integers, and fraction operations — all while preparing students for the EQAO math assessment. Here’s what parents need to know.
Grade 6 Math Curriculum Breakdown
1. Number Sense and Numeration
- Multiplying and dividing whole numbers (multi-digit)
- Fraction operations: adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing
- Introduction to ratios and percentages
- Introduction to integers (positive and negative numbers)
- Order of operations (BEDMAS)
2. Algebra (Patterning)
- Writing and evaluating algebraic expressions
- One-step equations with variables
- Tables of values and graphing
3. Measurement
- Area of parallelograms and triangles
- Volume of rectangular and triangular prisms
- Introduction to surface area
- Metric conversions
4. Geometry and Spatial Sense
- Angle relationships (complementary, supplementary)
- Properties of circles
- Plotting in all four quadrants of the coordinate grid
- Transformations (rotations, reflections, translations)
5. Data Management and Probability
- Circle graphs (reading and creating)
- Theoretical vs experimental probability
- Survey design and bias
- Mean, median, mode review
What Makes Grade 6 Math Hard
Grade 6 is where many Ontario students first feel genuinely challenged by math. Three key factors:
- Fractions become operational: Students don’t just compare fractions anymore — they multiply and divide them. This requires strong conceptual understanding.
- Abstract thinking increases: Algebra with variables, integer number lines, and probability all require thinking beyond concrete quantities.
- EQAO pressure: The Grade 6 assessment is the second provincial test, and students are more aware of its significance. Test anxiety becomes a factor.
EQAO Grade 6 Math Assessment
The Grade 6 EQAO assessment tests all five curriculum strands. It includes multiple choice, short answer, and extended-response questions where students must explain their reasoning.
Key preparation tips:
- Practise multi-step word problems (these combine strands)
- “Show your work” questions are worth more — practise clear explanations
- Don’t just do number sense — EQAO tests measurement, geometry, and data too
Top Tips for Grade 6 Parents
- Address fraction gaps NOW: If fractions are shaky, everything else gets harder. Focus here first. Fraction practice →
- Practise with Ontario-aligned material: Generic worksheets from American sites cover different topics at different grade levels. Free Ontario Grade 6 worksheets →
- Use the parent dashboard: If you’re using MapleMath, the dashboard shows strand-by-strand progress so you can catch gaps before EQAO.
- Build algebraic thinking: “What number makes this true: 3 × ___ + 5 = 20?” Start asking these at dinner. Algebra practice →