May 1, 2026

How to Help with Math Homework (Even When You’re Rusty)

How to Help with Math Homework (Even When You’re Rusty)

Your teenager slides a worksheet across the table. You glance down at something involving systems of equations or polynomial long division. Your stomach drops a little. You remember sitting in a classroom somewhere around 1994 learning this, but the details are gone.

I hear this from parents constantly. Not remembering high school math after twenty or thirty years is not a character flaw. It’s just what happens when you haven’t used something in a long time. The brain files it away, and eventually the file gets buried. That’s normal, and it doesn’t have to stop you from being genuinely useful when your kid needs help.

What I’ve learned from years of tutoring in Portland is that a parent who shows up, stays calm, and asks good questions is often more valuable than a parent who can execute every procedure flawlessly. In fact, the emotional environment around homework matters as much as the academic content. That’s terrain where you don’t need to remember anything about the quadratic formula to do well.

The Trap Most Parents Fall Into

When a parent doesn’t remember the material, the most common response goes one of two ways. Either they back away entirely and say “I can’t help you with this,” or they lean in hard, Google the procedure, and try to re-teach it in real time. However, both of those responses tend to backfire.

Why Backing Away Hurts

Backing away sends a signal that math is something foreign and frightening. It suggests that only specialists can touch it. That’s the opposite of what a struggling student needs to hear. As a result, the student’s own anxiety about math gets quietly reinforced.

Why Re-Teaching Causes Confusion

Jumping on Google and attempting to re-teach the lesson also has problems. Your teenager’s teacher may have taught the procedure a specific way. Introducing a different method mid-homework session creates confusion, not clarity.

I’ve seen kids come into tutoring sessions genuinely uncertain which version of a procedure they were supposed to know. In many cases, a well-meaning parent had accidentally layered a second approach on top of the first. The better path runs right down the middle.

What You Can Actually Do Tonight

The most useful thing you can offer is not the answer and not even the method. It’s your presence and your process.

Ask Them to Explain First

Sit with your kid and ask them to explain what they’ve already tried. This does two things simultaneously. It shows them you’re engaged, and it often helps them find their own mistake without you having to identify it.

There’s a well-documented phenomenon in education where explaining something out loud forces the brain to organize its own understanding. As a result, gaps become visible in the telling. Your student may solve the problem themselves just by walking you through it.

Ask Questions Instead of Giving Corrections

Questions keep the cognitive work on the student’s side, which is where it needs to stay for the learning to stick. For example, “what were you supposed to do first in this kind of problem?” is more useful than “I think you did that step wrong.”

Your goal isn’t to fix this particular problem. Instead, it’s to help them build the capability to fix the next one on their own.

Know When to Say “I Don’t Know”

When your student hits a genuine wall and neither of you can make progress, acknowledge it honestly. Say something like “I don’t remember how this works well enough to explain it, but let’s figure out where you can get unstuck.”

Then help them locate a resource. Khan Academy has excellent free video explanations organized by topic. Their teacher’s notes may clarify the method. Or you can reach out to a tutor. Modeling that kind of honest problem-solving is itself a valuable lesson.

Managing the Emotional Temperature

High school math homework generates real stress. This is especially true in later courses where the material is genuinely abstract and the stakes feel higher. Algebra 2, precalculus, and calculus all introduce concepts that require sustained thinking. Students who hit a block can spiral into frustration quickly.

Stay Calm When They Can’t

Your job in those moments isn’t to resolve the math. It’s to regulate the temperature. When your teenager is frustrated, the worst thing you can do is match their energy or add pressure.

A calm, unhurried presence communicates that this problem is solvable even when it doesn’t feel that way. Furthermore, it signals that one hard homework session doesn’t define what kind of math student they are.

Know When to Stop

If the session is devolving into a fight, stop it. Let them take a break, eat something, and come back in twenty minutes. A brain flooded with stress is not absorbing math concepts. Forcing through that state rarely produces good results.

I’ve told students this directly many times. The session you force yourself through while frustrated and exhausted is often worth less than a shorter session you do when you’re calm and rested.

Watch What You Say

What you say during homework matters more than you think. Phrases like “I was never good at math either” are meant to be comforting. However, they can quietly confirm a belief your student is already forming about themselves.

The research on this is clear and consistent. Students who believe their math ability can grow through effort perform better over time than students who believe it’s fixed. You don’t have to lecture on growth mindset every evening. But you can be careful about the casual things you say that might accidentally lock in a limiting belief.

The Homework Routine That can Help with Math Homework

Structure helps more than most parents realize. Homework done at the same time each day, in the same place, with distractions minimized, produces better results than homework done whenever there’s a gap in the schedule. It’s not about rigidity. Instead, it’s about reducing the friction between sitting down and actually starting.

Attempt Before Asking

For math specifically, I recommend your student attempt every problem before asking for help. Even getting partway through and getting stuck is more useful than giving up immediately.

The attempt activates the parts of the brain that will recognize and absorb the explanation when it comes. In contrast, students who skip straight to “I don’t get it” before genuinely trying often find that explanations don’t stick. There’s no context in their mind for the explanation to connect to.

Point to the Specific Step

When they do ask for help, have them point to the specific step where they got lost. “I understood it up to here” is a useful piece of information. On the other hand, “I don’t get any of it” is much harder to work with — and it’s also usually not true, even if it feels true in the moment.

When to Call in Reinforcement to Help with Math Homework

There’s a version of math homework help that parents can realistically provide. And there’s a version that requires someone who knows the material deeply and can explain it in multiple ways. Knowing the difference matters.

Signs Your Student Needs More Support

If your high schooler is consistently stuck several nights a week, that’s a signal. Similarly, if they’re understanding the work in the moment but forgetting it by the next test, or if their grade is dropping despite consistent effort, those are signs that they need more targeted support than homework help alone can provide.

What a Good Tutor Does Differently

A good tutor doesn’t just re-explain what the teacher said. Instead, they identify exactly where a student’s understanding has a gap, fill that gap specifically, and build the kind of confidence that carries into tests.

Here in Portland, I work with high school students across the full range of courses from algebra through AP Calculus. Most students who think they’re “just not math people” are actually missing a few foundational concepts. Once those concepts are addressed, everything downstream becomes much easier. The problem is rarely the student and almost always the gap.

You can learn more about how I approach tutoring at tutorportland.com. You might also find it useful to read about how I help students prepare for math tests on our blog at tutorportland.com/blog.

What Rusty Really Means

I want to come back to where we started, because I think it’s worth saying directly. When parents tell me they can’t help with math because they’re too rusty, what I usually hear underneath that is a worry. They’re afraid they’re failing their student by not being able to do what a math teacher does.

That worry is understandable. However, it’s based on a misunderstanding of what your student actually needs from you.

What They Actually Need

They don’t need you to be their teacher. They have a teacher. What they need from you is someone who shows up and takes it seriously without making it scary. They need someone who models the willingness to engage with something hard, even when you don’t feel totally competent. And they need someone who creates enough calm in the room for real thinking to happen.

Those things don’t require you to remember how to factor a trinomial.

The nights when you sit with your kid, admit you don’t remember how the problem works, and help them figure out where to look — those are not failures. In fact, they might be some of the most useful math homework sessions of the year.


Looking for more support? Check out our posts on 5 Signs Your Child Needs a Math Tutor and Questions to Ask When Choosing a Math Tutor to explore whether additional help might be right for your family.

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