Thirteen-year-olds are usually in eighth grade — the year many US curricula begin formal algebra. Eighth graders are expected to solve linear equations, work with functions and slope, apply the Pythagorean theorem, and use exponents and scientific notation. Formal algebra is the center of the year, but it depends completely on fluent arithmetic: integers, fractions, decimals, and multi-digit multiplication and division. This worksheet generator is preset to expert multiplication (3-digit × 2-digit) — a fluency skill eighth graders should never have to think about. Use it as a warm-up before algebra homework, not as the main math diet. If your child is rock-solid on arithmetic and you want challenge, combine it with a formal algebra textbook — this tool is not a substitute for an algebra curriculum.
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Try Askie FreeGenerate unlimited math practice worksheets for grades K-6+. Our worksheet generator creates randomized problems for basic arithmetic, long division with remainders, fractions, and geometry. Each worksheet is unique—download as many as you need.
Our worksheets cover K through 6th grade and beyond. Easy levels start with single digits, while Expert levels include 5-digit numbers and complex operations.
Addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, long division with remainders, fraction operations (add/subtract), and geometry (area and perimeter of rectangles and triangles).
Yes. Every worksheet is unique. Click Regenerate for new problems, or download multiple times for varied practice.
No. Generate and download unlimited worksheets for free. No signup required.
Expert is 3-digit × 2-digit. If your child is slow or error-prone here, the arithmetic gap will show up in algebra — practice until it's automatic.
Switch to long division at advanced (4-digit ÷ 2-digit). Division is where weak arithmetic most often breaks algebra fluency.
Eighth grade algebra is full of fraction manipulation. Keep hard fractions (unlike denominators) in your weekly rotation.
This tool is for fluency maintenance. Your child also needs a real pre-algebra or algebra curriculum alongside it.
Eighth graders work with the real number system, radicals and integer exponents, linear equations and systems of linear equations, the concept of a function, congruence and similarity (including the Pythagorean theorem), volume of cones, cylinders, and spheres, and bivariate data. The year centers on the transition from arithmetic thinking to algebraic thinking.
It depends on the school. Most US districts teach Algebra 1 in eighth or ninth grade. Some accelerated tracks do Algebra 1 in seventh or eighth, then Geometry or Algebra 2 in eighth. Check with your child's school.
Algebra problems are stacked: a single equation might require five or six arithmetic operations. If each step is slow or error-prone, the child runs out of working memory to think about the algebra itself. Fluent arithmetic isn't optional — it's the substrate the algebra runs on.
Maybe. If they can multiply 3-digit × 2-digit, long-divide, and do hard fractions without hesitation, yes — their time is better spent on actual algebra. If any of those skills are slow or shaky, don't skip them.
Any mainstream pre-algebra or Algebra 1 textbook will do. This tool isn't a curriculum — it's a fluency supplement. Khan Academy's algebra courses are a solid free pairing; most commercial textbooks are fine too.