Summer Math Practice — How to Prevent Learning Loss (Ontario Guide)
The “summer slide” is real — research shows students lose an average of 2.6 months of math learning over summer vacation. By the time school starts in September, teachers spend weeks re-teaching concepts from the previous year.
The good news? Just 15–20 minutes of math practice 3–4 times per week prevents nearly all summer learning loss. Here’s how to make it happen without turning summer into school.
Why Summer Math Loss Happens
Math is a skill, like a sport or instrument. Without regular practice, skills atrophy. Specifically:
- Procedural skills fade fastest (computation, fractions, long division)
- Conceptual understanding fades more slowly but is harder to rebuild
- The loss compounds: A child who loses 2 months every summer is effectively a full year behind by Grade 6
The Optimal Summer Practice Plan
You don’t need to recreate school at home. Research shows this schedule is sufficient:
| Frequency | Duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 3–4 days/week | 15–20 minutes | Review current grade topics |
| 1 day/week | 20 minutes | Preview next grade concepts |
That’s roughly one hour per week total. Your child still has 167 hours of awake time each week for summer fun.
What to Practise (By Grade)
Rising Grade 2 (Finishing Grade 1)
Addition/subtraction to 20, counting to 50, basic shapes. Grade 1 review worksheets →
Rising Grade 3 (Finishing Grade 2)
Two-digit addition/subtraction, place value, coins, time. Grade 2 review →
Rising Grade 4 (Finishing Grade 3)
Multiplication facts (0–7), basic fractions, perimeter. Critical year to maintain — multiplication facts need consistent practice. Grade 3 review →
Rising Grade 5 (Finishing Grade 4)
All multiplication facts to 9×9, equivalent fractions, area of rectangles. Grade 4 review →
Rising Grade 6 (Finishing Grade 5)
Multi-digit multiplication, fraction operations, decimal operations. Grade 5 review →
Rising Grade 7 (Finishing Grade 6)
Fraction operations, ratios/percentages, integers, algebra basics. Especially important if your child just completed EQAO. Grade 6 review →
Rising Grades 8–9
Integer operations, proportional reasoning, equation solving. Grade 8→9 is the biggest jump — summer bridging here is extremely valuable. Grade 8 practice →
Making Summer Math Fun (Not Painful)
- Gamify it: MapleMath uses XP, streaks, and badges. Set a summer goal: “Earn 500 XP by August!”
- Morning routine: 15 minutes of math after breakfast, before screen time. Make it a non-negotiable (like brushing teeth), and it becomes automatic.
- Real-world math: Cooking (fractions), shopping (money), road trips (estimation), sports stats (data).
- Mixed practice: Don’t repeat the same topic every day. Variety keeps engagement high and reviews more strands.
Adaptive Practice Is Perfect for Summer
During summer, you need practice that:
- Reviews current grade material (where skills are fading)
- Adjusts difficulty automatically (no parent needs to plan lessons)
- Provides instant feedback (no answer key needed)
- Keeps children motivated (gamification, progress tracking)
MapleMath’s adaptive platform does all of this. Set it up once, and your child has their summer math practice ready to go.