You watched your child finally get it in May. The fractions clicked, the quiz grades came up, the nightly homework standoffs eased off. Then summer hits, the backpack goes in the closet, and the math quietly starts leaking out. By September those same fractions feel like a foreign language again, and teachers spend the first few weeks back re-teaching what kids already knew. That gap has a name, the summer slide, and math tends to take the hardest hit.
The good news is that you do not need a rigid summer-school schedule to prevent it. You need the right kind of practice, done consistently. Below is what the research shows, what to look for in a summer math program, and how StarSpark fits into a real family's summer.
Researchers at NWEA, who study millions of student test scores, find that on average kids' scores flatten or fall over the summer, and the drop tends to be steeper in math than in reading. The average loss is roughly two months of school-year math learning. Summer is the most variable, highest-risk stretch of the year for math loss.
Why math specifically? Reading gets reinforced almost by accident. Kids read signs, menus, books, and texts all summer. Math does not get that incidental practice. If nobody is using long division at the pool, the skill fades.
Math is cumulative. Algebra leans on last year's fractions. Calculus leans on algebra. When a foundational skill gets rusty over the summer, it does not just cost your child that one topic. It makes the next grade harder, because the new material assumes the old material is solid.
That is the real cost of the slide. It is not only the weeks of review in the fall. It is starting the year a step behind on a subject where every step builds on the last one.
The instinct to schedule a math bootcamp in late August is understandable, and it mostly does not work. Skills come back the way they were lost, gradually, through repetition. Research on summer programs points the same direction: the ones that move the needle are sustained and consistent, not one-off crash courses.
The practical version for families is simple. Twenty focused minutes a few times a week, spread across the summer, will protect more skills than a frantic week at the end. Consistency beats intensity.
The format that holds up is regular practice that adapts to your child. Generic worksheets repeat the same problems whether your kid has mastered the concept or is still stuck, which wastes the strong skills and never fixes the weak ones. What works is practice that targets the specific gaps, explains the why when your child gets stuck, and adjusts as they improve. That is the difference between drilling and actual learning.
Not all summer math help is built the same. A few things separate a program that works from one that just keeps kids busy.
Look for a program that:
Skip the things that look productive but rarely move learning: thick worksheet packs that drill without teaching, passive video libraries kids half-watch, and answer apps that hand over solutions and call it help.
StarSpark is a personal AI teacher that delivers AI-powered tutoring built around exactly that kind of practice. It is not a summer-only product, and that is the point. It works year-round, so it can keep your child steady through the summer and right into the next school year.
A typical summer session is short, around fifteen to twenty minutes, and your child can do it from the couch or the car. They can type, draw, speak, or snap a photo of a problem, and StarSpark meets them where they are. It remembers where they struggled last time, targets those weak spots, and guides them through step by step instead of handing over answers. The math engine computes rather than guesses, so it stays 99.9% accurate, and everything aligns to grade-level standards. You get a parent dashboard and weekly progress emails, so you can see it working without hovering.
Preventing the slide is the floor, not the ceiling. Summer is also the rare stretch with no tests and no homework deadlines, which makes it the best time of year to get genuinely ahead. A student who spends part of the summer previewing next year's math walks into the fall with momentum instead of anxiety. Same fifteen minutes a day. Much bigger payoff.
How much math should my child do over the summer? Less than you would think, as long as it is consistent. Fifteen to twenty minutes a few times a week is enough to protect skills. Regularity matters more than length.
Is twenty minutes a day really enough to prevent the slide? For maintenance, yes. Short, steady, personalized practice is what keeps skills from fading. The goal is to keep the math muscles working, not to recreate a school day.
What grades and subjects does StarSpark cover? K-12 math from grade 3 through AP Calculus, plus high school sciences and AP subjects, with SAT and ACT prep on the way.
Will my kid actually use it without me nagging? StarSpark is built to feel like help, not homework. It guides instead of lecturing, adapts to your child, and gives them small wins that keep them coming back.
"By August, my son had forgotten half of what he learned in fifth grade, and I was dreading the fall. This summer we did about fifteen minutes on StarSpark most mornings, usually before the pool. He walked into sixth grade actually ahead, and there were no tears and no fighting me on it."
- Ashlee, Parent of 7th Grade Student
The best time to stop the summer slide is before it starts. Set your child up with short, personalized math practice they will actually stick with.