Year 7 Topics in MathCraft

MathCraft's Year 7 content builds on KS2 foundations with reverse percentages, volume of prisms, rotations, probability, and complex ratios. These topics develop the algebraic thinking needed for Years 8 and 9.

At a Glance

  • 7 topics with 29 learning steps
  • Every topic aligned to White Rose Maths
  • Adaptive practice that meets your child where they are

Number & Fractions

Geometry & Shape

Algebra & Arithmetic

Money, Data & Measure

Coordinates & Statistics

What Your Child Learns in Year 7

The National Curriculum sets clear expectations for each year group. Here are the key maths topics your child should be working on:

How MathCraft Helps at This Level

Every game mechanic in MathCraft connects to real curriculum content. Here is how the adventure maps to Year 7 topics:

Parent Questions About Year 7 Maths

How do I help with algebra when I've forgotten it myself?

You don't need to remember the methods — you need to understand the logic. Algebra is just "find the missing number" with more steps. Ask your child to explain their method to you. If they can teach it, they understand it. MathCraft's AI tutor provides Socratic hints when your child is stuck, so you don't have to be the expert.

My child did well at primary but is struggling in Year 7. Is that normal?

Very common. The jump from KS2 to KS3 is significant — new school, new expectations, harder content, less hand-holding. Many children who sailed through primary hit a wall in Year 7. The key is filling any KS2 gaps early. MathCraft's adaptive engine detects these gaps automatically and provides targeted practice.

Should my 11-year-old still be using a maths app, or is that just for younger children?

MathCraft is designed for Year 1 through Year 9. The Year 7 content is genuinely challenging — reverse percentages, 3D volume, formal probability. The RPG mechanics are age-appropriate and sophisticated enough that secondary-age children don't feel patronised.

Typical Struggles at This Age

Every age group has predictable stumbling blocks. Knowing what to expect makes them easier to handle:

The primary-to-secondary transition

Moving from one teacher who knows your child to multiple subject teachers is a big adjustment. In maths, the pace accelerates and topics become more abstract. Consistent daily practice helps your child feel in control. Even 15 minutes keeps skills sharp during this transition.

Reverse thinking (working backwards)

Reverse percentages and inverse operations require thinking backwards, which is genuinely harder than thinking forwards. "If 120 is 80% of the original, what was the original?" doesn't come naturally. Draw bar models to make the relationship visual.

Losing confidence with geometry

Year 7 geometry — prisms, transformations, vectors — is more abstract than the shapes and areas of primary school. If your child struggles, go back to physical models. Build a prism from paper, rotate a shape on tracing paper. Concrete experience builds confidence with abstract concepts.

Start Practising with MathCraft

Step-by-step lessons, worked examples, and adaptive practice — all wrapped in an adventure game your child will love.

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