30 Days Per Level • 240-Day Math Path

Build Toward 8th-Grade Math Readiness

The first 30 days are the first milestone, not the finish line.

MathEasy30 is designed as an 8-level path with 30 calm practice days per level. Learners build from counting and simple addition toward fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios, and pre-algebra readiness.

🫧 Bubbles Says

Day 31 is the next step.

Finish one level. Celebrate. Then start the next 30-day path.

What Happens on Day 31?

Day 31 becomes the first day of the next math level. The learner does not stop at one 30-day path.

Celebrate

Finishing 30 days is a real win. Confidence matters.

Review

Check whether the learner is ready to move up or should repeat the level.

Continue

Start the next 30-day path with a little more challenge.

The 8-Level Math Path

Level A

Counting, number order, bigger/smaller, and simple addition.

Level B

Addition and subtraction within 20, missing numbers, and simple word problems.

Level C

Stronger addition/subtraction, place value, time, money, and multi-step basics.

Level D

Multiplication, division, equal groups, arrays, and fact families.

Level E

Fractions, measurement, money, time, and practical math.

Level F

Decimals, mixed operations, larger word problems, and number sense.

Level G

Ratios, percentages, negative numbers, graphs, and expressions.

Level H

Pre-algebra readiness: equations, coordinate plane, geometry basics, and 8th-grade review.

Honest Promise

MathEasy30 should not promise that every learner will reach 8th-grade math in exactly 240 days. Starting level, memory, confidence, daily practice, and outside help all matter.

Better promise: Many learners can build stronger math confidence and work toward 8th-grade readiness with 240 days of calm, steady practice.

240-Day Structure

8 levels × 30 days = 240 practice days.

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What 8th-Grade Math Readiness Means

  • Understand numbers, operations, and fractions
  • Solve multi-step word problems calmly
  • Use ratios, percentages, and negative numbers
  • Read graphs and tables
  • Prepare for pre-algebra concepts
  • Explain thinking in simple words

Repeat is Allowed

If a level feels too hard, repeat it. Repetition is practice, not failure.