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Math U See Alpha – An Honest Review

It is actually painful for me to write this Math U See Alpha Review.

I really, really wanted it to work out. You have no idea.

My first year of homeschooling my 1st grader was going so well – better than I could have hoped for!

Except for math.

We originally started with The Complete Book of Math and it was a disaster.

I day dreamed of what school would be like if I could just casually shove math over a cliff and skip away.

Long story short, there is no shame in a mid-year curriculum switch.

After much research, reading many reviews, and even taking a break from math, I decided it was time to switch to Math U See Alpha about half way through 1st grade.

Math U See Alpha Review: How it Works

Math U See is such a popular, well loved math curriculum! Check out this review to see how the curriculum works, why the manipulative set is just as awesome as everyone says, what my math hating kid thought of Alpha, and whether we still use it in our homeschool today. I hope this math curriculum review helps your family make the best informed decision for your kids and homeschool!

When we first started, I was in love. I thought (and still do) that Math U See Alpha is brilliant.

We bought the Math U See Alpha Universal Set and it included:

  • Instruction Manual

  • Instruction DVD

  • Student Workbook

  • Tests booklet

  • Integer Block Kit

  • 12 months of access to our new Alpha Digital Pack

    • Skip Count Songs MP3s

    • Songbook PDF

The focus of Alpha is learning 100 addition facts and then 100 subtraction facts. There are some other lessons (skip counting and shapes), but by far the overall theme of the year is math facts.

The parent has an instructional manual and is encouraged to read each brief chapter before teaching it to their student.

There is also an instructional DVD. It is a teacher (and creator) of Math U See teaching each lesson to a classroom of real students.

After watching the lesson, then the child goes to a workbook and goes through a page (front and back) while the parent observes and assists as needed.

Once the child has mastered the week’s assignment (is able to teach the curriculum back to you), the student goes to the test booklet. There is a test for each week’s lesson and it is used as an indicator of the student’s mastery of the lesson.

What We Loved about Math U See Alpha

heart - what we loved about the curriculum

1. Customer Service

I was a little unsure about what level we should start on. Math U See customer service reached out to me though and they were excellent!

It was a homeschool dad who has used Math U See Alpha with his own kids. I thought it was so cool that Math U See pays parents to help with customer service!

He gave me fantastic advice and got us on the right path. He also contacted me by email for follow up and promptly answered my questions after we received the curriculum.

It felt great to know I had someone to reach out to when I needed help.

2. The best manipulative set ever

Math U See Alpha - Manipulative Box

The manipulative set that Math U See uses is genius. Seriously.

Our old manipulative set took FOREVER to use because it was just loose colored blocks. To solve 8+6, my daughter would have to count out 8 blocks. Then 6 blocks. And then count them all together again.

It was a lot of counting that made her really tired!

With Math U See, the blocks are not loose. They are color coded based on number. For example, a “6 stick” is purple and an “8 stick” is brown.

For my daughter to do 8+6, she would grab a brown stick (8) and a purple stick (6) and then count them once. Done! Much easier for her to do multiple problems.

3. Video based lessons

Math U See Alpha CD Lessons

A huge plus was that there was minimal prep work required for me.

I did read the chapters before lessons, but we always started math with the video lessons.

They have a little bit of a dated feel to them, but I LOVE the way that the teacher explains things. He is able to break things down so simply. My daughter enjoyed getting out her blocks and following along with him.

As a side note, I know at some levels, kids are independent with their Math U See video lessons. I wouldn’t say that is appropriate for Alpha level.

I sat with her, reinforced things after the video, and was always available while she was doing worksheets.

4. Each week focuses on one thing

Our first math curriculum did a lot of skipping around, so I felt like there was not much time to really cement a concept.

With Math U See, it is laser focused on one thing. That really helped my daughter as we went through the lessons, did the work, and took the tests.

5. Mastery focused

Math U See tells parents to wait for mastery of a lesson before moving on. If you need to stay on the lesson for several weeks or even months – that’s okay!

If your kid is able to move on after 1-2 days – that is okay too!

I loved having the freedom to assess my kid and make a decision to move at our pace. It absolutely made the Math U See experience feel very customized to us.

6. Really smart ways to remember math facts

One of my favorite things about Math U See is the amazing way that math facts are taught.

My daughter was able to pick up facts that she had previously struggled with and I actually even learned a few tricks to remember certain facts a different way.

Its a really smart curriculum!

7. You know when you’re done

With our previous math curriculum, there were a lot of games. Despite my best efforts, my daughter didn’t like playing the games. I always felt like I didn’t know when we were done.

Have we played this long enough? Did we do enough problems? I wasn’t really sure.

With Math U See, you and your kid easily know when the lesson is complete. Very motivating!

Depending on the day and what we were learning, lessons were 10-30 minutes. Very manageable!

What We Didn’t Like About Math U See Alpha

Thumbs down - didn't like

As you are reading this, you must be wondering, “Um…how exactly was this not working for you?!”

I know, I know.

Initially, I was loving all of the benefits of Math U See Alpha.

We were actually 3-4 lessons from finishing the curriculum, and I decided to call it. Again. This was not working.

Here is what went wrong.

1. Repetitive

bored kid

As I talk to other homeschool moms who have used MUS, they also note that the curriculum is incredibly repetitive.

We did math facts every day. For months. I will admit that I even got tired of learning and reviewing math facts.

My daughter did well initially, but eventually started struggling with learning some of the bigger facts (17-9, 8+7, etc.). There was no escape from it. We were never doing anything but math facts.

I think it started to make her really hate math all over again. I think she felt like math was only math facts (which it is not!), despite my best efforts to bring in fun review games.

2. Dry workbook pages

Math U See Alpha Review Workbook

As I said, there is minimal parent prep work…but that means that your kid is mostly only doing black and white workbook pages.

When you flip through the Math U See Alpha workbook, it is a sea of addition and subtraction problems and word problems.

There is an “enrichment” page at the end of every week that my daughter usually enjoyed, but the rest of the week was spent looking at very dry material.

I now know that so much of math and learning at this age should be done through games and fun – not “drill and kill” worksheets.

3. Focus on mastery

Mastery of a lesson before moving on was initially a benefit of Math u See Alpha. As we progressed through the curriculum though, it became a burden.

Guess what? A six year old doesn’t want to stay on the same concept for weeks or months!

She would miss review problems on worksheets and it was always unclear if she was just making silly mistakes or she forgot how to solve the problem.

Did we need to go backwards in the book?

She would get frustrated with me and herself when she would make mistakes, forget things, and when she was not ready to test out of the lesson at the end of the week.

Sometimes we spent weeks on one lesson and I could tell it just aggravated her. She was sick of talking about this math fact!

I honestly think it developed a sense of unreasonable perfection in her. She felt she had to remember everything and get every problem right every time.

That’s a lot of pressure for a 6 year old!

I actually reached out to customer service and asked about this whole mastery thing. I was given a prompt and kind reply, but it was somewhat vague about how to progress.

4. Too many tips and tricks

Confused kid using Math u see alpha

As we got into the higher math fact numbers, there were great methods taught to learn complicated problems.

The problem was that every lesson had a trick or a cute story to remember.

My daughter started to get them all jumbled up in her head. She gave me crazy answers for problems because she was so focused on applying the trick – she just couldn’t remember the right one.

When I had her look at the problem, and see how the answer made no sense at all – she would get even more frustrated.


I even took her back a number of lessons so we could start learning the facts over again and hopefully cement the material better.

She was compliant and worked with me, but it did not help. She would teach me a concept, but weeks later could not remember the concept with all the other new concepts added on top of it.

I’ll be honest and admit that I can’t quite remember all the little tips and tricks that were taught. I can easily see how a 6 year old could get them mixed up.

5. The Test Booklet

As mentioned above, every lesson has a test.

The child is ready to take the test when they are able to teach the lesson back to the teacher.

Early on the tests were a breeze and I think my daughter enjoyed taking them. As things progressed, she began to fear that test booklet.

She would start asking me questions on test day before we had even started math. I could see the anxiety building.

She would get so upset when it wasn’t a perfect test, even though I told her it didn’t need to be perfect. I told her it was just another worksheet and she didn’t need to worry about it at all. It was just a tool to tell me if we needed more time on a concept.

The last day we did Math U See was a test day. My younger kids were being rowdy, so I sent her to her room to take her math test.

A significant amount of time went by and I went to go check on her. She was holding her math book and crying because she just could not remember and she didn’t know what to do.

I took the book away from her and that was the last time she has touched it.

Another mom wisely told me later that I should have never given her a test from the beginning. If she can do the worksheet, she can do a test. There is no reason for a 1st grader to take a math test. Period.

6. Wrong curriculum for 1st Grade level in my opinion

After stopping Math U See Alpha (1st grade level), I was really surprised when I looked into 2nd grade curriculum for my daughter and discovered much of it was focused on the same math fact memorization we were running away from.

I found out that many other 1st grade level programs just want the child to understand the concepts of addition and subtraction. Simple facts are reviewed and memorized over time as other math concepts (measurement, simple fractions, time, etc.) are also explored.

So, I was drilling my 6 year old on math facts (17-9, 14-8, 9+6, etc.) and expecting mastery…while many other curriculums do not even introduce these facts until 2nd grade.

This matters a lot, because you can greatly frustrate a child by asking them to do something that they cannot developmentally understand. It’s a recipe to make kids hate learning.

After Math U See, we took a total break from math. Like months off. When I felt like we were ready to address math again, I just ran through flash cards with her one day to see where she was at. She got nearly every single one right. I was shocked.

What changed? I think her age and development from age 6 to age 7 was significant. I could see in her eyes that she was solving the problem and “making 10” in her mind and able to work out the problem – something she couldn’t seem to do consistently at age 6.

As I’m writing this, I remember the MUS customer service agent telling me that his own daughter spent a very long time (1.5-2 years) on Alpha. I’m wondering if the reason Math U See Alpha takes so long, is because it is targeted at 6 year olds – and should be 7-8 year olds.

****UPDATE 2/2020: So I wote this review almost 2 year ago, so I thought I should pop in and give you an update on what I did with my middle kid when she hit first grade this year.

Nope, we didn’t use Math U See Alpha – that’s for sure. We opted for this math curriculum and I could not be happier. It uses the spiral method (not mastery) for teaching math and my kid is thriving. Thriving you guys.

We are over halfway through and she is learning about skip counting, calendars, money, shapes, addition, subtraction, double digit addition, word problems, odd/even numbers, place value, telling time, etc. Lots of variety and tons of review = lots of fun!

And as a side note, I used this addition supplement to teach my 1st grader (She has a late birthday so she started 1st grade when she was 6 months older than my first child. I figured I’d try it with her and see what happens – and even then I waited until she was over 7 years old to start.) her addition facts.

It took 6 weeks and it was taught through brief lessons, games, and worksheets for reinforcement – and suddenly she knew all her addition facts! I cannot tell you what a positive experience it was. So much better than what we experienced with Math U See. I will be putting out a full review in the future, but for now please check out the book before teaching your kid math facts – huge sanity saver!!

I will be following up with the subtraction supplement soon!

Math U See Alpha Review – Bottom Line

Math U See Alpha is a really smart curriculum and I respect the team that designed it.

It very well may be a great fit for your child – many of my friends have used it and love it!

The manipulative set is genius and we still use it for math even though we don’t use the rest of the curriculum.

I think it would have been more effective if we had started when my child was a bit older, ignored the mastery concept, and if I had never used the test booklet.

We moved on to Math Lessons for a Living Education for 2nd grade and fell in love! From there we have switched again to Teaching Textbooks for 3rd grade because it allows my daughter to be more independent while I start working with her younger sister who is now at the kindergarten level.

I decided to write this Math U See Alpha review because I also read a lot of curriculum reviews before buying. I really hope this will help you make the very best informed decision for your homeschool!

I would love to hear your experience with Math U See in the comments and answer your questions –  I know others would benefit from it too!



 

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Read Next:

Looking for a high quality, low prep math curriculum for your elementary aged homeschooler? Check out this comprehensive Horizons Math review to see why I picked it, exactly what daily lessons look like, what I love about this curriculum, and what I would change. Oh, and what my 1st grader has to say about it!

 

15 Comments

  1. I have been an educator and homeschooler for 15 years and know many homeschoolers who feel like you do about MathUSee. Brilliant blocks, badly designed program. As a special education teacher, I often need to practice 500 times for something to stick, and video games are the only humane way to get them to do that much math work. I had to tie the blocks to the math seeds program. So recently, I made my own Easel video game-type program to sell on TPT, but I want to give it away here for free to as many homeschoolers who want to try it. I put it in a Google Classroom. https://classroom.google.com/c/NjM5ODEyNTE4MTIw
    With class code: laiekzc

    1. Lauren Schmitz says:

      Thanks for the sharing the resource, Jennifer!

  2. Rebecca Schepler says:

    My son like your daughter hated the black and white pages of MUSee so I did the spiral colorful route but I noticed he wasn’t getting the concepts. he was just memorizing. Plus becuase it was spiral it was harder to teach as a parent because it jumps from one concept to the next. My oldest who has ADHD tendencies enjoyed the lessons I felt, but he wasn’t grasping concepts. With Math u see when he was six, I had the same response as yours. I decided though instead of making him do the page I would just ask him the question and have him show me with the blocks and this worked amazingly. Now that he is older and watched a lot of odd squad lol which also reinforced these math concepts, beta level has been a hundred percent better and he has scored pretty high and math. I love that for some one who loves math it’s easy for me to teach and breaks it down in concepts. My youngest who started at 5 loves this book and actually we are half way done with the book. He doesn’t care if it’s black and white. I think remembering to break it down on their level and personality helps. The reason why I pick this curriculum is that reviewers who had taken this curriculum score higher in standardized test and that’s my ultimate goal is to make sure they are equipped to excel and any area they choose to go in so I want to make sure they have solid math foundations.

  3. I know this is an older post, but I feel the need to jump in and leave a comment for anyone who may see this in the future.

    I haven’t used the MUS curriculum, but I’m starting to look into it. I’m a special education teacher and last summer I bought a whole bunch of math manipulatives, and these manipulatives were in the bunch. I absolutely love the manipulatives for my kiddos. They are so much better than base 10 blocks, and can be used for so many different math concepts.

    Like I said, I haven’t used the curriculum, but I do think that it would be a good supplement for my students.

    The biggest thing I can say to those who may be dissuaded by this review, is not to let the repetitiveness tour you. Once a student has mastered it, move on. If it’s becoming boring, move on to another subject and go back to it later. Jumping around in math is fine. Work on some addition, go to subtraction, come back and do higher addition and then do more subtraction. You don’t have to follow this step by step. Do what is best for your child.

    The biggest thing I’ve learned as a special education teacher, is that curriculums are designed in a way that students need to adapt to it instead of it adapting to the student. So don’t be afraid to adopt the curriculum to your student’s needs. Not all students learn in the same way, the curriculum can be used as a guide, but ultimately set your own sequence.

    Now when it comes to so many tips and tricks being confused, you don’t need to teach every single one. If your student is getting the concept without needing it then don’t use it. Save those tips and tricks for the material that they are struggling with.

    I also strongly agree with the parent who said not to use the tests. Not all students are going to do well on tests. Find a way to let them show you their mastery without taking a test. If they’re showing their mastery on the worksheets, why do they have to continue to do more problems? It’s just more of that repetition.

    Ultimately, whatever curriculum you decide to use with your child, you don’t have to follow step by step. Use what works and leave the rest.

  4. Getting all the tips and tricks confused was our #1 problem. My 7 year old flew through alpha in 4 months, we did all the worksheets and yet I really don’t think any of it solidified in his brain. Taking Abeka at a slow pace has been much better, and teaching math facts by families instead of tricks has helped him really learn them!

  5. We use Math-U-See for all grades at our classical school, and several things address some of these issues and make it work, even for younger students:
    1) If the student gets 100% on the first of the three “new concept” (A, B and C) lesson pages, then they don’t have to do the next two. S/he then skips to the D, E and F pages to review prior and current lesson material. Then, only if her test score is less than 90 percent, the student must go back and finish B and C pages. That eliminates some unnecessary work.
    2) Enrichment pages are mandatory.
    3) Students work in math books for 20 minutes, move to a practical math/games table for 20 minutes, then back to math books for the final 20 minutes of their math hour. Some students work for 40 minutes, then move to the game table.

    Agree wholeheartedly with the “readiness”/developmental comments.

    1. Lauren Schmitz says:

      Amy, thank you for the comment and the ideas for my readers!

  6. MotherOf4Girls says:

    After working through 4 kids with Math U See we have learned to use ONLY the test booklet as the daily work (too many questions in workbook) and went back to the main workbook IF there was something we needed more practice on. We switched from MUS to Jump Math between grade 2-3 (after Alpha or Beta) as we are enrolled with the public system and must meet British Columbia learning outcomes. Math U See does not work with the BC LO. The benefits has been huge…MUS is a great foundation for math especially struggling learners, however, its limiting and repetitive. Parents must know when to skip ahead to the next lesson or stay the course, cut back on the number of questions (do only the odd questions, do every other page) and when to hit every question. Just because a curriculum offers many questions to practice, it does not mean we must do EVERY question in the workbook. I apply this piece of advice to every workbook. Right Start Math also has very good manipulatives to learn the foundations of math.

    1. OH! Love seeing you comment here AND mention Right Start Math.
      I am deciding between MUS and Right Start for my 5th grader, next year.
      Hmmmm…? Thoughts? 🙂
      THANKS!

  7. I’m curious since you loved “math lessons for a living education” with your older child why you didn’t use it for K or 1 for your younger child? And why you decided to start with the horizons math? (I have a 6 yr old, will be 7 in May daughter and am struggling w which cirriculum to get)

    1. Hi Danielle! Our homeschool has gone through A LOT of math curriculum. We originally liked Math Lessons for a Living Education for my oldest. But we tried Teaching Textbooks (only for 3rd grade and up) and she was immediately hooked, so we switched and never looked back. My middle child learns completely differently so we have taken a different path with her. She loves Horizons Math and it was a perfect fit for her in 1st grade. She is now in 2nd grade, and I have her doing a little Horizons and a little Teaching Textbooks too. My youngest is in kinder and doing beautifully with Horizons. Here is my Horizons Review and my Math Lessons for a Living Education Review

  8. I agree with another poster s comment you should do a review on Math Lessons for a living Education ?? I love your reviews by the way! We have decided to go with Singapore PM SE 1 for first grade.

  9. Thank you so much for writing this! I felt this way teaching my kids MUS and all I could find were rave reviews about how amazing it is and I felt like I was missing something. So on point!!

  10. I am literally going through everything you’ve described with my 6 year old kindergartner (she has a late birthday). All I’ve heard about MUS are amazing reviews, but sadly it’s been a miserable experience for us. As a first time homeschool mom, it left me feeling extremely discouraged and my daughter was often frustrated trying to remember all of the tricks. The curriculum is so dry and, like your daughter, she would only enjoy the one enrichment page at the end of each section. We are only halfway through alpha and summer is looming so I’m trying to decide if I should finish it out or just start over with something else. Thank you for this review, though. It’s such a relief to know I’m not alone!

    1. Kiara, It’s always good to hear I wasn’t the only one either 🙂 Happy Homeschooling! 🙂

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