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  • You Can Skip Algebra in Middle School
  • Math without Meltdowns!
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  • Let’s Skip Algebra!
    • Algebra Can Wait- Why Rushing Ahead is a Problem
    • Homeschool Math for Middle School
    • 14 Things I Hate About Homeschool Math
    • The Search for the Perfect Math Curriculum (and Why It Doesn’t Exist)
    • Top 10 Free and Paid Middle School Math Resources for Homeschoolers (2025 Edition)
    • How to Help Kids Solve Math Word Problems
    • Math Vocabulary Every Student Needs Before Algebra
    • Math Basics for Middle School- How to Help them be Ready for Algebra
    • Why Algebra Fails So Many Kids (and What to Do Instead)
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You are here: Home / Blog / blog / Homeschool Math for Middle School

Homeschool Math for Middle School

October 26, 2025 By Bekki Leave a Comment This content may contain affiliate links.

(plus 13 Things I Wish Every Parent Knew About Teaching Math)

Table of Contents (Because we all skim—no shame here.) Peek Inside
1 When Smart Kids Stop Thinking
2 Press Pause, Not Panic
3 13 Things I Wish I’d Known About Teaching Math
3.1 Hope for the Mom Who Thinks She Broke Math

It happened on an ordinary Tuesday.
Sunlight spilling across the kitchen table.
A half-empty mug of coffee beside a half-finished math worksheet.

My twelve-year-old sat there—pencil frozen mid-air, eyes wide, whispering,
“I don’t know how anymore.”

This from the kid who could estimate the height of a tree by its shadow, build a catapult out of scrap wood, and calculate whether he had enough allowance to buy rope and soda.

But that morning, one worksheet erased it all.

When Smart Kids Stop Thinking

I watched him erase and re-erase the same line until the paper tore.
And I realized something gut-wrenching:
He hadn’t forgotten math.
He’d forgotten confidence.

Psychologist Jo Boaler, from Stanford University’s math-education research group, says,

“When children see math as a series of rules to memorize rather than ideas to explore, their brains literally shut down in the presence of a mistake.”

That’s what I was seeing—shut-down learning.
He wasn’t confused by numbers; he was afraid of them.

Somewhere between flashcards and fractions, I’d made math about getting it right instead of getting it.


Press Pause, Not Panic

So we stopped.
No curriculum overhaul. No new program.
Just permission to think again.

We baked bread.
We guessed totals at the grocery store.
We argued (in the best way) about whether 12×12 was closer to 100 or 200.

Neuroscientists call it sense-making—the moment when information connects to real life.
And that’s the heartbeat of number sense.

Slowly, the light came back.
Not because we added more math,
but because we made space for curiosity.


13 Things I Wish I’d Known About Teaching Math

  1. Speed is not understanding.
    A fast answer can still be a shallow one.
  2. Confidence is part of the lesson plan.
    Kids learn best when they feel safe to be wrong.
  3. Number sense grows from experience.
    Play store. Double recipes. Count change. That’s the real curriculum.
  4. You can’t worksheet your way out of fear.
    Mastery comes from conversation, not repetition.
  5. Math is a language—use it daily.
    Talk about distance, time, cost, and possibility.
  6. Mistakes are data.
    They show you how the mind is building connections.
  7. Hands before screens.
    Dice, dominos, and measuring cups wire the brain for math.
  8. Fractions take years.
    Years. Let them. Understanding can’t be rushed.
  9. Real-world math heals academic wounds.
    Budgeting, building, cooking—everyday problems restore logic and trust.
  10. Relevance sparks retention.
    When math matters, kids remember.
  11. Algebra can wait.
    Arithmetic fluency is the foundation every skyscraper needs.
  12. Praise effort over ease.
    Carol Dweck’s research calls it a growth mindset. It works.
  13. Connection beats curriculum.
    Every single time.

Hope for the Mom Who Thinks She Broke Math

If your kitchen table has seen tears (theirs or yours), take heart.
You didn’t ruin math.
You just rushed past the roots.

The good news? Roots can regrow.
Start with curiosity.
End with connection.
Everything in between is just counting blessings in disguise.

Because one day, when you’re least expecting it,
they’ll look up from a recipe or a paycheck or a project and say,
“Hey, Mom—this is math, isn’t it?”
And you’ll smile, because you’ll know—
they never really forgot how to think.


Filed Under: blog, Let's Skip Algebra! Tagged With: math

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