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Why Children Hate Mathematics And What the Science Says About Fixing It

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Why Children Hate Mathematics And What the Science Says About Fixing It
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Many adults remember when they were still children saying “I HATE MATHS” and almost every parent has heard it. But why most students hate studying mathematics?

But here is what the latest research tells us: your child almost certainly does not hate mathematics and what they have is something more specific, more measurable, and  crucially  more reversible than hate and it is is called mathematics anxiety, and it is one of the most thoroughly studied phenomena in educational psychology  and understanding what maths anxiety actually is, where it comes from, and what reliably reduces it is the difference between a child who grows up avoiding numbers and one who grows up using them confidently. This article explains the science  and what you can do about it today.

What Maths Anxiety Actually Is

Mathematics anxiety is not a learning disability and it  is not a sign of low intelligence ,  is not even, in most cases, caused by a genuine inability to do maths. Maths anxiety is a feeling of apprehension, of dread, when a child is placed in a situation where they have to engage in mathematical problem-solving and can produce measurable physical responses  increased heart rate, changes in skin conductance  meaning it is both a psychological and physiological reaction, not merely an attitude.

What makes this particularly damaging is the mechanism by which it disrupts performance as when a child experiences maths anxiety, they begin to ruminate  “I'M NOT GOING TO BE ABLE TO DO THIS, I'M TERRIBLE AT MATHS.” Those ruminations occupy mental capacity, leaving less room to actually focus on the problem. It creates a dual task: the child is simultaneously trying to solve the maths and manage the anxiety it has triggered and the performance drops not because the child cannot do the maths but because their working memory is consumed by fear. Maths anxiety meets all the criteria of a specific phobia, feelings of tension, stress, frustration, and anxiety when manipulating numbers or solving mathematical problems and critically, it is not only associated with immediate negative emotional reactions. It has detrimental long-term consequences for career choice, employment, and professional success.

Mathematics anxiety is  not a minor inconvenience but persistent barrier to effective learning, particularly in primary education and also  high levels of mathematics anxiety are consistently linked to poor achievement in mathematics, decreased confidence, and reduced motivation  a pattern that has been documented across countries, making it a genuinely global phenomenon.

Where Maths Anxiety Comes From

Maths anxiety often begins to emerge in the early school years, and experiences during childhood and adolescence can shape long-term engagement and achievement in maths. Researchers identify three levels of influence: individual factors, interpersonal factors, and sociocultural factors.

Source 1: The Individual : Early Failure and the Feedback Loop

The most common origin story for maths anxiety is simple: a child struggles with a concept early on, receives negative feedback, begins to associate maths with failure, and starts avoiding it and that avoidance leads to less practice, less practice leads to weaker skills, weaker skills confirm the child's belief that they “CAN'T DO MATHS.” The cycle reinforces itself.

Researchers call this the reciprocal feedback-loop model of maths anxiety  where early maths performance, attitudes and beliefs, cognitive disruption, and avoidance interact and reinforce each other over time. And  earliest point of intervention is the most powerful. A child who gets support during the first signs of struggle  rather than years later when the avoidance pattern is deeply established has a dramatically better outcome.

Source 2: Parents : The Transmission Nobody Talks About

This is the finding most parents are surprised by, and it is one of the most robust in the literature. Parents with high maths anxiety tend to avoid activities involving mathematical content, providing children with fewer opportunities to practise and learn maths competencies in the home environment but the transmission goes deeper than opportunity.

Parents' own maths anxiety and beliefs about mathematics including whether they believe maths ability is fixed or can be developed directly shape how children approach maths challenges and how they respond to setbacks. The parent who sighs and says “I WAS NEVER GOOD AT MATHS EITHER” while helping with homework is not simply commiserating. They are communicating a belief that maths ability is inherited, fixed, and not something effort can change. Children absorb that belief and act on it.

This does not mean parents with maths anxiety cause irreversible damage,  It means being aware of the messages you send about mathematics  verbally and non-verbally matters enormously and  Avoiding comments like “I WAS TERRIBLE AT MATHS” or “MATHS IS JUST HARD” goes a long way.

Source 3: Teachers and the Classroom Environment

The way mathematics is taught shapes whether children develop anxiety or confidence. Two classroom practices in particular are well-documented contributors to maths anxiety:

1.   Timed tests. Speed drills and timed arithmetic tests are among the most reliably cited triggers of maths anxiety in research literature. When speed becomes the measure of mathematical ability, children who process thoughtfully but accurately  and there are many  receive the message that they are failing even when their understanding is strong.

2.   Public correction and humiliation. Being asked to solve a problem on the board, getting it wrong, and being corrected in front of peers is a common experience that researchers consistently identify as a formative moment in the development of maths anxiety. The subject becomes associated not just with difficulty but with public failure  a far more emotionally charged experience.

3.   Fixed ability grouping. Placing children in "low" maths groups early and keeping them there communicates a fixed-ability message. Research consistently shows that children perform up or down to the expectations communicated to them  a phenomenon known as the Pygmalion effect.

What Does Not Work

What Actually Works: The Evidence-Based Fixes

1. Reframe What Maths Is For

Most children experience mathematics as an abstract performance task  a series of problems to be solved correctly under time pressure and children who develop a healthy relationship with maths tend to see it differently: as a tool for understanding patterns, solving real problems, and making sense of the world.

This reframing starts at home as cooking involves fractions, shopping involves percentages, Sport involves statistics meaning that pointing these out  not as lessons, but as natural observations  begins to normalise mathematical thinking as part of everyday life rather than a school subject to be endured.

2. Praise the Process, Not the Result

Carol Dweck's growth mindset research, discussed in depth in our article on why children hate studying, applies with particular force to mathematics  because maths is the subject where fixed-ability beliefs are most culturally entrenched. When a child struggles with a maths problem and keeps trying, praising the persistence  not the eventual answer  builds the belief that effort produces improvement. That belief is both scientifically accurate and the foundation of maths confidence.

Concretely: I noticed you tried three different approaches to that problem” beats “ well done, you got it right.”

3. Remove Speed as the Primary Measure

At home, never time your child's maths practice unless speed is genuinely the specific skill being developed. Allowing children to work through problems at their own pace  with accuracy as the goal  reduces performance anxiety and allows genuine understanding to develop.

4. Make Mistakes Normal

The classroom culture of maths as a right-or-wrong performance leaves children afraid to attempt problems they are not certain about and at home, you can create a different culture. When your child makes a mathematical error, the most valuable response is curiosity rather than correction: "Interesting — how did you get that?" This models the idea that mathematical mistakes are information, not failure  and it develops the analytical thinking that actually produces improvement.

5. Get the Right Support Early

The feedback loop that drives maths anxiety struggle, anxiety, avoidance, weaker skills, more anxiety  can be interrupted at any stage, but the earlier the better. A targeted intervention in a specific area of weakness, delivered by someone patient and skilled, can break the cycle faster than months of classroom exposure.

A good maths tutor does not simply reteach what the classroom has already covered but they identify the specific conceptual gap that is driving the difficulty whether it is place value, fraction intuition, algebraic thinking, or something else entirely  and rebuild understanding from that point.

At Mathrone Academy, we specialise in exactly this. Our maths tutors work across all levels  primary through advanced secondary  and are matched to your child's specific needs, learning style, and the curriculum they follow.

 WhatsApp us on +250 786 684 285

 Request a maths tutor at Mathrone Academy

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is maths anxiety a real condition or just an excuse? It is a real, measurable psychological and physiological response documented across thousands of studies over 45 years of research. It meets the criteria of a specific phobia and produces measurable changes in heart rate and cognitive function. It is not an excuse it is a barrier that responds well to the right interventions.

Q: At what age does maths anxiety typically start? Research shows maths anxiety often begins to emerge in the early school years  as young as age 6 or 7  and can solidify significantly by age 9 or 10 if not addressed. The earlier the intervention, the better the outcome.

Q: Can a parent's own maths anxiety affect their child? Yes  this is one of the most consistent findings in the literature. Parents who express anxiety about maths, avoid maths-related activities, or communicate fixed-ability beliefs about mathematics directly influence their children's maths attitudes and confidence. Being mindful of the messages you send  verbal and non-verbal  makes a real difference.

Q: What is the single most effective thing a parent can do to help a child who hates maths? Identify the specific point where understanding breaks down  not the general subject, but the exact concept that feels impossible. Then address that gap specifically, with patience and without time pressure. Everything else follows from that.

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