
Math: Why is it so Hard?
April 1, 2026
Gena Suarez
Math is Hard—Teach It Anyway
Todd Wilson
Be Flexible!
Alexandria Letkeman
Mastery vs. Perfection in Math
Carolyn VanGorkom
When Math Overload Sets In

Hey, Mama!

Math is Hard—Teach It Anyway
Hey, Mama!
I’m going to be honest with you. Math is not my thing. It never has been. When I was nineteen years old, I had my heart set on a career in medicine. I wanted it badly. But when I looked at what stood between me and that white coat, it was math, and I was terrified. So I walked away.
I’ve wondered about that decision more than once over the years.
What I know now that I didn’t know then is that fear is a terrible teacher. It tells you that you can’t before you’ve even tried. “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7). That’s the promise we stand on, even over a math book.
Here are a few things I’ve learned along the way. Don’t rush the foundation. If they don’t own the basics, everything above it wobbles. Use manipulatives with the little ones because touching and counting beats staring at a page. Let video instruction carry some of the weight, since a different voice explaining the same concept can unlock something you couldn’t. And don’t let your own math fear become theirs. Keep your face neutral even when you’re struggling inside. Or, if all else fails, do what I did: teach literature at your local Schoolhouse Co-op while your own kids take math from the smartest math mom-teacher there. (Grin)
SchoolhouseTeachers.com has math covered from kindergarten counting all the way through calculus, with options for every kind of learner. If math has felt like a wall in your homeschool, there’s real help waiting there.
You’re not failing at math. You’re just not done yet.
His hand is on your head, Mama. Always.
—Gena
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GUEST CONTRIBUTOR
Art and Astronomy Retreats
Montaukglamping.com
The Value of Teaching Astronomy
Astronomy is first a gateway to further learning for young learners. A sense of wonder is among the best possible motivations for learning; “affective gains precede cognitive gains.” In particular, astronomy is a gateway to mathematics, which is already a prerequisite for most vocations. And even elementary astronomy gets into math pretty quickly. It was a big part of the reason human beings started doing math in the first place, to keep track of the seasons for large-scale agriculture.
Some people enjoy mathematics so much that they find it worth learning about and doing for its own sake, but for most of us, it’s a means to an end. For those responsible for directly educating their own children, the end is not only to make them well-rounded people, but capable of supporting themselves and others. The higher purpose is that they be givers, not just receivers; producers, not just consumers. Astronomy supports that as a foundational element of a classical education, particularly to impart what the ancient Greeks called dianoia (διάνοια), the knowledge of mathematical and technical subjects through discursive thinking—proceeding by reasoning or argument rather than intuition. As technology pervades our daily lives, dianoia will be not merely important, as it already is today, but essential.
About the author
Jay Manifold, a longtime member of the Astronomical Society of Kansas City (https://askc.org) is a former Vice-President, Board member, and Education Director of the organization. A volunteer and keyholder at Powell Observatory (Louisburg, KS) for over 20 years, he has delivered hundreds of presentations on astronomy to groups ranging from Cub Scout packs to community college classes. He offers a variety of astronomical workshops; e-mail <aquila.astronomy@gmail.com> or text (573) 537-2347 to request prices and scheduling. Montaukglamping.com

Todd Wilson
Be Flexible!
When looking at the question, “Why is math so hard?” I realize it is an inaccurate question. The truth is, math is easy for some people. I’ve met kids and adults who can add strings of numbers, divide large numbers in their heads, and do magical things with fractions that escape me.
They would say, “Math is easy. All you need to do is see the numbers this way, line them up like this, or do this simple calculation.” They might even assert that, “Anyone can do math!”
Wrong-o! Not everyone can do math. In fact, I think the question should be worded, “Why is math so hard for me?” . . . or maybe, “Why is math so hard for my child?”
For me, the answer is simple to grasp and state—because some people are not math people. They don’t see math like math people do. The numbers don’t make sense and certainly are never easy.
That said, most people can learn to add, subtract, multiply, divide, and do simple fractions (I may be stretching that last one for us math-challenged folks). Oh, I took plenty of math during my school years (advanced calculus in college). I even got good grades, but I never really got it, and attribute my good grades to the gift of guessing. I couldn’t even solve a simple fractions problem now and that’s okay.
So here’s my answer to your question, “Why can’t my kid get math and what am I supposed to do with him?”
Answer one: He’s not a math kid. Accept that and back off.
Answer two: Be flexible and find a math program that might work for him—something like Teaching Textbooks. My brilliant math wife used an abacus with one of our children who struggled with math and it clicked. So don’t just keep using what worked with your math kids. Try something different.
Be real,
Todd
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