Six-year-olds are usually in first grade, where math shifts from pure counting to real arithmetic. By the end of the year most kids are comfortable adding and subtracting within 20, reading and writing numbers up to 100, and starting to solve simple word problems. This worksheet generator is preset to easy addition (1–10) so your child can warm up, but most first graders should spend their time on the medium addition and subtraction sheets, which cover the 1–20 range that first-grade curricula target. Aim for ten minutes of daily practice. If your child is still counting on fingers, that's expected — fluency with small sums is a first-grade milestone, not a starting point.
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Easy is 1–10, medium is 1–100. First graders should spend most of their time on easy for now — medium problems will come later in the school year.
Switch operations every few days so your child builds fluency in both. Subtraction is usually harder at this stage.
Short daily practice beats long weekly sessions. Stop before your child gets frustrated.
Praise effort and strategies more than right answers. Kids who feel safe making mistakes learn math faster.
First graders are expected to add and subtract within 20 (often fluently within 10), read and write numbers to 120, compare two-digit numbers, understand place value (tens and ones), and solve simple word problems involving addition and subtraction. They also start telling time to the half-hour.
Kindergarten is mostly about counting and recognizing numbers. First grade moves into actual arithmetic: adding, subtracting, and solving one-step word problems. The numbers get bigger (up to 20 or 100) and the expectation is that kids can do small sums without counting on fingers by the end of the year.
Subtraction is harder than addition because it doesn't map as neatly onto counting. Try 'counting up' (for 8 − 3, count from 3 up to 8) instead of 'counting down'. Use blocks or coins to make the operation physical. And keep the numbers small — getting fluent with sums under 10 is more useful than struggling through larger problems.
Not yet. First graders are still building fluency, and timed drills at this stage can create math anxiety. Save timed practice for second grade and beyond, when the basics are solid.
Fifteen to twenty is usually about right. You can bump it up to 25–30 once your child can finish fifteen problems without losing focus.