Online math resources

For Early Learners

Khan Academy Kids is designed for ages 2-7.

Education.com has preschool math games, such as a counting pizza party.

The National Association for Young Children has many suggestions for teaching math to young children at home.

Math at Home offers resources for teaching early math skills starting with infants and continuing through early elementary. 

Zero to Three explains the importance of early math skills when it comes to literacy and walks parents through the importance of each skill and examples of how to teach them.

ABC Mouse is currently offering free subscriptions to their program, which includes preschool math.

For Elementary School

Khan Academy is a free math resource for students, parents, and teachers. It offers lessons, quizzes, challenges and exercises aligned with math educational standards from kindergarten – college. 

FunBrain has math games broken down by grade level from first – eighth. 

Math Playground features games, videos and logic challenges for grades 1 – 6. 

Online Math has games organized by grade level.

Kidzone Math offers free printable practice worksheets. 

Varsity Tutors – A Plus Math has games, flashcards, worksheets, and a homework helper.

ABCYA lets kids play fun math games that align with common core math standards. 

BrainPop is filled with fun, interactive math games. Many teachers use it in the classroom, so lots of kids are already familiar with it.

Starfall offers math practice in basic skills for preK – third grade.

AAA math features thousands of interactive arithmetic lessons. 

Edhelper has tons of fun math worksheets for all ages.

For Middle School 

Khan Academy has videos and lessons for all grades.

Hippocampus has pre-algebra and geometry lessons and practice games. 

Education Possible has a list of over 50 fun and interactive math games for middle schoolers.

Math Snacks has games, animation and interactive tools to help middle schoolers with basic concepts.

Prodigy offers fun math games for middle schoolers. Many teachers use it in class and report it turns math haters into math lovers. 

Math TV is like Netflix for math! Videos are broken down by skill. 

CoolMath offers lessons and games in pre-algebra, algebra, and pre-calculus. 

Online Math has games broken down by grade level from 1 – 8. 

Math Is Fun offers lessons, games, worksheets and puzzles on all sorts of math concepts including speed and velocity, money and geometry.

Illustrative Mathematics offers problem-based curriculum for grades 6-8.

Multiplication.com is great for middle schoolers who are a little rusty on those multiplication facts. It’s designed for elementary – high school students with age-appropriate games so kids don’t feel self-conscious about their skills.

For High School 

Hippocampus offers free lessons in advanced math subjects including calculus, statistics, and trigonometry.

All In One High School is a free curriculum resource for homeschoolers. It’s broken down by subjects, such as algebra or geometry, and links to videos, quizzes, and activities each day. 

FreeMathapp allows students to enter equations from their textbook or assignment and then helps them break it down step by step. 

Math2.org has printable reference tables to help with algebra, calculus, trigonometry, etc. 

Fiveable is an app that live-streams lessons for AP course material.

SAT Prep through Khan Academy. Kids can see where they’re at and then immediately get help understanding questions they missed. 

Online Math has games organized by subject, such as algebra, geometry, and precalc. 

Dave’s Short Trig Course is from Clark University and offers a basic intro to trigonometry. 

Purple Math is designed to help the struggling algebra student. 

Free Online resources

National Geographic for Kids is great for a Science resource, and it has games! This is a great source for your animal lover, or for your gamer who needs a little educational content thrown into the mix.

ABCMouse is for ages 2-8. ABC Mouse offers a 30-day free trial, with fun activities in Reading, Math, Science, Art, and Colors. This would be my top pick for pre-school and early elementary teachers!

PBS Learning Media Because there are far more elementary resources outweighing the resources for higher grades, this one is great for any grade level! PBS offers activities in almost every subject: social studies, English, Science, Art, Math, Technology, Engineering, Health, and more.

Storyline Online Although there is no substitute for parents reading to their children or having their children read to them, Storyline is a great alternative for you tube if you’re looking for safe, educational videos for your child. The website takes books and turns them into videos for children.

Kids Discover is a primarily History/Science website geared towards older children (think middle/high school). The site has a wide variety of topics to choose from with “visually appealing” articles on each topic, blending art and writing to create an interesting way to learn new information (and remember it!)

Wonderopolis is a fun website for the curious question askers! It takes commonly asked questions and bases lessons around them. “How do you find a sunken ship?” and “Do birds get shocked when they sit on wires” are a few questions that are explored on this website.

Dave’s Short Trig Course is from Clark University and offers a basic intro to trigonometry. 

Purple Math is designed to help the struggling algebra student. 

History/civics/government/geography coming soon!

sciences coming soon!

Literacy coming soon!

languages coming soon!