Math Anxiety in Children — Signs, Causes & What Ontario Parents Can Do
Math anxiety affects up to 25% of students, and it starts earlier than most parents realize. If your child says “I’m bad at math” or “I hate math,” they may be experiencing genuine anxiety — not laziness or lack of ability.
What Math Anxiety Looks Like
Math anxiety isn’t just disliking math. It’s a physiological stress response that interferes with performance. Signs include:
- Avoiding math homework or practice
- Tears or frustration during math tasks
- Saying “I can’t do this” before trying
- Blanking out during tests (they knew the material yesterday)
- Physical symptoms: stomachache before math class, sweaty hands
- Negative self-talk: “I’m stupid,” “I’ll never get this”
Why It Happens
1. Speed Pressure
Timed tests in early grades can trigger anxiety in children who process more slowly. These children may understand math perfectly — but the time pressure creates a panic response.
2. Gap Accumulation
When a child doesn’t fully understand fractions in Grade 4, every subsequent math concept that builds on fractions feels impossible. The child doesn’t know the cause — they just feel like “math doesn’t make sense.”
3. Parent/Teacher Anxiety Transfer
Research shows that parents who express their own math anxiety (“I was never good at math”) transfer that anxiety to their children. Even well-meaning statements like “It’s okay, I’m not a math person either” give children permission to opt out.
4. Fixed Mindset
Children who believe math ability is fixed (“some people are math people, some aren’t”) give up faster when challenged. Children with a growth mindset (“I can improve with practice”) persist through difficulty.
What Actually Reduces Math Anxiety
1. Remove Time Pressure
At home, never time your child during math practice. Let them work at their own pace. Speed comes naturally with fluency — forcing it creates anxiety.
2. Start Below Their Level
If your child is in Grade 5 but struggles with fractions, go back to Grade 3 fraction concepts. Build confidence with success, then gradually increase difficulty. MapleMath’s adaptive practice does this automatically.
3. Praise Process, Not Results
- Instead of: “You’re so smart!” (promotes fixed mindset)
- Say: “I noticed you tried three different strategies. That’s real problem-solving.” (promotes growth mindset)
4. Normalize Mistakes
Share math mistakes you’ve made. Show that even adults get things wrong and learn from it. In MapleMath, every wrong answer comes with an explanation — mistakes become learning opportunities, not failures.
5. Short, Consistent Sessions
15 minutes daily is far less overwhelming than a 45-minute weekly session. Consistency builds familiarity, and familiarity reduces anxiety.
How Adaptive Practice Helps
Traditional worksheets give every child the same questions. A child with math anxiety gets questions that are too hard, confirms their belief that “math is impossible,” and the anxiety cycle deepens.
Adaptive practice breaks this cycle by:
- Starting where the child succeeds
- Increasing difficulty gradually
- Providing immediate feedback and hints (not just “wrong”)
- Tracking progress so children see their own improvement
The result? Children build evidence that they can do math. That evidence is the antidote to math anxiety.
When to Seek Extra Help
If math anxiety is:
- Affecting other areas of school
- Causing regular physical symptoms
- Not improving despite supportive strategies
Talk to your child’s teacher about extra support. Schools have resource teachers and interventions available. You can also consult a child psychologist who specializes in academic anxiety.
Try MapleMath free → — adaptive, encouraging, and designed to build confidence. 7-day trial, no credit card.