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How is a kumon student taught, is kumon for struggling or gifted children, how does kumon differ from extra lessons or classroom learning, why do kumon students complete worksheets every day, why is kumon work timed, do you have a different question, page title.

Does Kumon Really Work?

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Does Kumon work?

Overview Math skills play an important part throughout life, even now that we’re so reliant on computers and digital devices that do most of the arithmetic for us. But strong math skills can be the foundation for advanced degrees and engineering and science, and can set your child up for a better and more productive future.

It’s well known that the American educational system leaves something to be desired, especially if your child is going to a public school system that faces overcrowding and other roadblocks to an effective classroom. Giving them additional lessons sounds like a smart choice.

The Claim Kumon claims that their after school programs can help your child because they are individually created after your child’s needs are assessed. This is not to be confused as one-on-one time with your child, but rather a way to tailor their pre-made academic programs to your child’s current abilities, and project a path for their learning.

The Hype Any time a franchise reaches the level of success that Kumon has, there will always be some hype that comes along with it. The mere fact that this is practiced in multiple countries in various forms speaks volumes about the sort of results parents must be seeing. Logic dictates that it wouldn’t have been able to grow to this size of an operation if parents weren’t seeing noticeable and measurable results, at least to a level that would convince them to keep their children enrolled.

The Cost The cost has often been justified as being more expensive than teaching your children on your own, and less expensive than a private tutor giving one-on-one lessons. It’s $110 a month per subject that you enlist them in, and there’s a one-time enrollment fee of $70.

The Commitment Many parents would be attracted to this service because they feel like they wouldn’t have to do much in order for their child to learn. But like with most activities your child takes part in, the more you involve yourself in it, the better it will be for them. That’s why you’ll want to take a hands-on approach to this, in order to supplement the learning that they are doing, and to set the example that learning can be fun and interesting and that everyone does it.

The Pluses One thing that most parents agree on is that they can in fact see improvement in their child’s reading and math abilities, so it’s not as if the time spent using it is wasted, or that the method doesn’t have any effectiveness whatsoever. At this point it’s also stood the test of time, and been used by millions of students around the world, so it’s not as if it’s a new system and your child is a sort of beta guinea pig to see if it works or not. You’re basically plugging them into the pre-established system and letting it do its job.

The Minuses In Japan, the country where the program originate, the Ministry for Education criticizes their methods as relying too heavily on rote memorization which stifles a student’s ability to think critically and solve problems using reason and logic. Reading programs that rely on memorizing words have come under some scrutiny in the United States as well, with programs like Your Baby Can Read . Here children are taught how to recognize words on sight, which gives the illusion that they’re learning to read, but in fact they aren’t able to sound out words using phonics.

Evaluation It’s hard to get an accurate idea of how Kumon is being received by parents, because each parent is going to expect something a little different for their child, and this will determine whether they think this is a good investment or not. And that’s exactly what you see when you look at the reviews: half of parents think it’s great, while the other half don’t like it at all. You also have to remember that some parents will want the sort of drills and repetition and feel that this is what their child needs in order to learn to focus, while others will see it as turning their child into an automaton.

Since parenting and teaching styles vary so wildly, the only real way to know if this is something that will work for your child, and get your seal of approval is to give it a try and see how they respond to it. The only real drawback to this is the $70 enrollment fee that they charge to get started. It might be possible to sit in on a class, or have your child use the workbooks before enrolling them to give it a trial run before signing on completely.

Final Kumon Review

Kumon gets our Thumbs Up rating and It will likely prove effective if you go in with reasonable expectations as a parent and focus on getting your money’s worth out of the service they provide. You’ll want to balance it out with your own teaching, and challenge your child to think creatively, since this is only going to show them how to do arithmetic and many of those that have tried it have said that it gets repetitive.

Our Recommendation It’s important that children learn as much as they can at a young age. This is the time of their lives where they’re best able to learn new concepts and if they’re not given the necessary challenges this time will be wasted. The American education system lags behind in the global economy, especially when it comes to math, and this is mostly due to other cultures putting more emphasis on early education and expecting more out of their children when it comes to academic performance.

What do you think? Does Kumon work or not?

19 customer reviews on “ does kumon really work ”.

Kumon is absolutely horrible. Both me an my friend go to Kumon, and we both agree it is basically a math sweatshop, since we both only do math. They hand out 10 pages of homework, WITH PAGES ON THE BACK!!! I already have so much work from school, but having to do 10 backsides pages makes it impossible. Also, I am kind of starting to see my friend develop anger issues as well, after all, we do have 10 pages we have no idea how to do. Don’t send your kid to this living hell, I promise you, you will regret it if they go here.

It is the worst! It is so repetitive I am in 8th grade been doing it for 7 years now. It is so stressful especially when you get into higher grade levels the amount of homework and kumon just is too much! I am planning on quitting it myself.

Beside Kumon,many parents recommend using Beestar. i used Beestar for my son at least three years. It’s user friendly and the math practice program based on school curriculum. Their exercises are interesting to him, so the uses the programs without much parent supervision. I really appreciate for that.

I sent my child at the center for English Reading. The program was good for him initially but in just less than a year, it became too difficult for him to continue. At the center there are inexperienced teaching staff. When the child is struggling with understanding concepts this is not explained to them. The solution offered by the staff is to get the student to repeat the same material over and over again without understanding the concepts taught. The Kumon solution is simply, to repeat the material multiple times. The child hates doing the same material over and over again. The staff will also make a student repeat the material if they take more than the allocated time to complete each book. My child took much longer to do the material than the allocated time, as he hated doing the work and spent most of the time complaining about having to do the material. He is also a very slow writer. Kumon does not take any of these factors into account. It assumes that if a child takes longer than what they determine is acceptable then, the child needs to repeat the material. When the child repeats the material, they remember the answers not how to determine the answers. The early levels 7A to 2A (inclusive) tests did not assess his spelling of basic words. They started testing spelling at A1 level. I noticed that even though my child moved on to higher level, he still did not know how to spell basic words. Kumon assumes that the child will learn how to spell basic words in earlier levels which is wrong. At A1 level and beyond, the child is expected to learn how to spell about 150 words (which is excessive) in addition to the concepts taught at each level. In the material there are no strategies explaining to the child how to answer comprehension questions. The Kumon material also does not explain concepts well or often, provides no explanation at all. Kumon books which can be purchased from retailers explains concepts far better than the course material. In some levels there is too much for the child to learn in one level. If the child fails, they are given the same test to do. The child passes the second time, simply because they know the answers to the test not because they have learnt the concepts in the level tested. This is a “false” sense of achievement for the child and the parent. But Kumon does this to make parents believe the program is working for their child. The center offers no helpful assistance to the child and the program is 100% reliant on the parent to assist the child. So you are paying for the material $130- $150 per month. Significant improvements need to be made to the Kumon material and the method of teaching. My recommendation is if you want to try the program, try it for no more than 8 months and then switch to another course or use the Kumon books instead, which can be purchased online.

I agree with you its SH!T It pisses me off so bad when I do it

I am a 9th grader who has been doing Kumon for about 4 years, and i do agree that Kumon is helpful in some cases but it’s stupid, i’m learning trig right now and i don’t get any of it and the helpers can’t help u so i’m stuck with packets i don’t even now how to do, also reading kumon is not even close to helpful. Kumon is just a waste of time and money, i really don’t recommend it

ITS CRAP IT GIVES YOU FAR TO MUCH WORK AND QUESTION WITH NO ANSWER BRUH I HAVE DONE TONES OF THIS SH!T AND ITS SLAVERY DO NOT GO

I feel you far to much work.

I have a PhD in Statistics and I am a mother. I was horrified when my daughter’s “progressive” curriculum at her private school left her unable to add single digit numbers in 2nd grade. We immediately started Kumon and public school, and by the end of 3rd grade in public school she was one of the top math students. It’s hard work and involved many tears, but it absolutely works. Just like exercise, the more you do, the stronger you get.

Her public school does common core, while Kumon does traditional mathematics. Her Kumon has helped her with common core, even though the approach is completely different.

When I tutored math, I noticed that many of my students struggling with higher math (including in high school) lacked basic numeracy. They were trying to do calculus but couldn’t even do multiplication, and were counting on their fingers.

I’m just going to say it. Kumon sucks. It’s too repetitive and can be very stressful and degrading.

I am a current student at Kumon, and I’m a high-school freshman (9th grade). I’ve been attending since I was 3 years old. Yes, I’ve been attending Kumon for 12 years. I have to admit, I’ve had plenty of moments where I absolutely hated Kumon. Loathed it, even. I used to cry and sob every time i had to do long division. I hated it, but i knew it would help. Many people talk about how it hasn’t helped their child at all but there are many factors we must take into account. Firstly, the time matters. When you’ve been attending Kumon for a longer period of time, it tends to help you more. Most parents who have had children attending Kumon had their children enrolled for anywhere from anywhere from a few months to about 2 years. I can understand why this wouldn’t help, your child hasn’t been in the program for very long. However, I’ve been attending for 12 years and counting, and I honestly cant begin to explain how much its helped me. In elementary school, I always had phenomenal grades because i had already learned most of the material from Kumon. What we were learning in school was basically a review. All throughout elementary and middle school, and even high school now, Kumon’s impact on my education has been obvious. Kumon helps so much, with all levels of math. For example, in algebra, I already knew the majority of what i was being taught, and i was able to help my friends with their schoolwork when they didn’t understand it. Just last week, in my current math class (geometry), we were factoring to solve a problem that involved algebra, and my friend was having trouble factoring a polynomial where a was not equal to 1. I taught him the cross method (a relatively simple method taught in Kumon to factor) and he understood immediately! Kumon has also prepared me for future courses. Currently in math, we are learning geometry. Although Kumon doesn’t really touch upon geometry as much, I am still able to use my algebra skills to help me (I finished all of Algebra I and Algebra II by the end of 6th grade). Recently, I finished pre-calculus and am now doing Trigonometry. After Trigonometry, I will move onto Calculus and will learn through AP Calculus. I cannot even begin to explain how much this will help my grades in school, especially since schoolwork after 9th grade has a huge impact on college. Doing well only increases your chances of going to a great college, and Kumon is the right way to go! I do admit, I used to hate Kumon with all my heart. I used to beg my mother to quit. But in recent years, I’ve found myself thanking her and my instructor for keeping me in Kumon. It honestly helped so much. And while we’re on the topic of instructors, many people have had bad interactions with their instructors, but this is not necessarily all instructors. An instructor depends entirely on them, it isn’t Kumon’s fault if they’re not very nice. For me, I have a great instructor. She’s basically become family now, us having known her for 12 years. She always explained my math and reading to me very well when i didn’t understand, and she always made sure i completely understood before moving me on to a new topic. I always feel at home at Kumon, and over the summer, i am welcome to volunteer there to help with the younger kids and the kids whose coursework I’ve already mastered. My instructor is a great woman, and I always discuss my current grades with her. I keep her updated on everything happening at school whenever I go to the Kumon center (twice a week) and she always provides me with great advice. Her, my mother and myself have the rest of my education planned out, up to and including college! I am so grateful to have such a great instructor. To end, I want to say that yes, Kumon will be a lot of tears, and it will be very annoying and irritating and children will hate it (trust me, I went through it myself), but in the end, it has helped me and is continuing to help me so much more than me and my mother originally bargained for. I truly mean it when I say Kumon is worth it.

I had high hopes when I signed up my seven-year old son for the math program. But after five months, I had to throw in the towel. The exercises were endlessly repetitive, boring and demotivating. Kumon’s standard approach when a kid has problems with the work sheet is to repeat it over and over again or just to go back a few exercises and start over. Talk about money for old rope! The instructor and the assistants also seemed highly stressed in the center and no wonder. Kumon is like a gigantic paper-chase, with methods anchored in 1950s Japan (which is when the method started up). Kumon seems to have no interest in updating its ‘method’ and why should it when it can extract 30% plus royalties from franchisees just for supplying paper worksheets and very little else? I switched to an i-Pad based method and both I and my son are very glad we did.

Well Kumon is a supplement for children who need the support. I put off doing it for my daughter for two years because I didn’t believe it would engage her and who loves doing worksheets? Not me….well to sum things up she’s struggled academically since 1st grade (now she’s in 3rd). We did private tutoring at a cost of 100$ per week for two hours. It worked with specific reading strategies that she needed. However, there was little carryover or retention of skills. I decided to put her in June (when they offer free enrollment) because I wasn’t going to let her start 3rd grade not knowing her math facts and counting on her fingers (2nd grade does 2,4,5,610 multiplication facts with 2 step multi-operations word problems). It is now January 22, 2016 and she has been six months in Kumon and it has been difficult to get her to do the worksheets at times like summer or knowing her friends don’t have to do “additional” work, BUT the consistency in doing it every day and the physical act of writing for practice for both math & reading that I am happy to report she is on grade level and doing very well this year! Kumon works in my opinion for children who need the basics (number facts, reading on grade level, reading comprehension etc ) and for children who need the repetitive practice to gain confidence and help improve those skills that need to be route and automatic to them.

I think we are living in a competitive world and we should give our children every opportunity to succeed. Side note we still do tutoring but only one hour a week and we have always worked with her endlessly to help her. Since she has a younger sister we put the 4 almost 5 year old in June as well and she is working well beyond kindergarten level. She can read her sister’s reading packets maybe not comprehend them but far more than we ever imagined she could do at 5 in six months time. Don’t waste time like I did…you will regret it. Research shows if they aren’t caught up by 3rd grade it is more difficult to close that gap in achievement. Good luck on your journey…definitely a learning experience for me as a parent and educator. I definitely have a higher level of empathy for parents with the same issues and know where they are coming from.

Andrea, I agree that Kumon is not fit for all children. To begin with the history, Kumon was started by a teacher who wanted to help his son to achieve, but it doesn’t mean that these methods work for every single child out there. Do not waste time and money for programs at Kumon when there are alternatives that can help without spending loads of money to improve your child’s math skills. My daughter has attended at our local Kumon Center for a good two years, thinking that it would help her improve, but no. The Kumon Center did not help her, but rather just gave her loads of work assigned by worksheets and workbooks to complete on their own. What kind of learning process is this?!? A year ago, we were introduced to another program which was Beestar, and we were afraid that it would turn out to be the same as Kumon. But guess what? Not only did we see dramatic changes in her math, she also did above average in her reading and writing skills as well. Not to mention that Beestar offers free math, so therefore, you would not waste money on courses nor money on workbooks that seem to be no help at all. Beestar offers multiple subjects and provides great online management for us parents to check the progress of our children. We are very satisfied with the results we see and will definitely stick with Beestar!

Andrea, I agree with you that Beestar is a better alternative to Kumon! They offer free math and it does really help improve their math and other subjects as well, without spending the extra money on workbooks and time on worksheets. Beestar offers a manageable amount of workload depending on the child’s pace and not rushing them nor do they just assign work for them to do on their own. Also, Beestar provides online management for us parents to track the progress of our children anywhere, anytime. It’s been a year since we’ve tried Beestar and we are in love in what we see as our child is enrolled in Beestar! We will definitely stick with Beestar to the max!

Are after school centers like ‘Kumon’ worth the money? The answer to this question is: ‘”NO!” Do not waste time and money for programs at Kumon when there are alternatives that can help without spending loads of money to improve your child’s math skills. My daughter has attended at our local Kumon Center for a good two years, thinking that it would help her improve, but no. The Kumon Center did not help her, but rather just gave her loads of work assigned by worksheets and workbooks to complete on their own. What kind of learning process is this?!? A year ago, we were introduced to another program which was Beestar, and we were afraid that it would turn out to be the same as Kumon. But guess what? Not only did we see dramatic changes in her math, she also did above average in her reading and writing skills as well. Not to mention that Beestar offers free math, so therefore, you would not waste money on courses nor money on workbooks that seem to be no help at all. Beestar offers multiple subjects and provides great online management for us parents to check the progress of our children. We are very satisfied with the results we see and will definitely stick with Beestar!

I think that Kumon has it drawbacks that we may need to reconsider sometimes. Yes, US is behind in education compared to some of the other countries but I think that each child learns differently so it is best to find what works for them. For my daughter it was difficult to keep her attention on Kumon as the worksheets were tedious. Her teacher recommended us to try out Beestar and we have been using it for almost 2 years now! She thoroughly enjoys the worksheets and the worksheets also keeps her interested. It is an amazing tool to utilize and also free of charge!

I’m one of those parents who believes we teach too many things to our children that they’ll never get to use or benefit from. I believe school hours should be shortened and children should be allowed to be children for a change. But that’s not the way the world functions at present time and if you want to help your child stay competitive you have to continue to teaching them. If that’s the case I guess the next best thing to a talented tutor would be courses like kumon. I wish I didn’t have to make my boy study even more after school, but what choice do I have?

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What Is Kumon and Does It Really Work?

What Is Kumon and Does It Really Work?

This post was originally written for a different website; however it has been removed that site since it was published. I still believe it has valuable information and publishing it again, here.

You’ve likely seen ads on television or passed by Kumon centers in your daily travels.  Have you every wondered, exactly, what Kumon is?

About 9 months ago, I was introduced to Kumon through one of their publicity firms, learned about their program and decided to try it out.  Before I get into the results, let’s start with a little bit of history.

History of Kumon

The History of Kumon

In 1954, Toru Kumon, a high school math teacher in Japan, began developing materials to help his second grade son who was struggling in math.  With a few key principles in mind, Mr. Kumon created a series of sequenced materials for his son to complete after school.  His son improved in math; Mr. Kumon’s neighbors heard about this success and began asking him to work with their children.  The first Kumon center opened in 1956 and it continued to grow, expanding into North America in 1974.

Now you know why Kumon is so familiar to you already; it’s been around for over 50 years!  They offer after school programs for both math and reading.  We elected to participate in the math program, since my daughter didn’t feel confident in that area and has always been a strong reader.

What is Kumon?

what is kumon

The curriculum consists of hundreds of short assignments (worksheets) completed in sequential order.  Every assignment is timed and graded.  Students must get close to 100% accuracy within a set time in order to be able to move on to the next level of worksheet.

In our case, my daughter was assigned additional “speed drills” for addition and multiplication practice.

What to Expect During Your First Visit to Kumon

When you enroll in the program, you will sit down with a center instructor for an orientation.  During the orientation, we watched a Power Point presentation and went over parent expectations.  Parents will be required to complete some paperwork (it wasn’t terribly long) and children will take a placement test.

The placement test is actually a series of tests.  Your child will work through different “leveled” evaluations until he or she can not complete any more.  These tests are immediately graded and your child will be sent home with his or first assignments to be completed.  All in all, expect to spend roughly an hour and a half during your first visit.

What to Expect at Home

Page 8 of the Kumon Parent’s Guide says “There’s no getting around it: Kumon is extra.  Extra time.  Extra homework.  Extra effort.“  Boy, do they mean it.

Children are expected to complete their Kumon assignments 7 days a week.  My daughter was assigned 10 worksheets a day, 7 days a week, plus 10 minutes of “speed drills” each day.  Parents, you’ll be expected to grade the assignments immediately, return them to your student to correct and participate in the speed drills.  Be prepared to commit about 30 minutes a day  to Kumon assignments.

In addition to the daily at-home assignments, children visit the Kumon center 2 times per week to turn in their homework and receive the next batch.

Our center was flexible enough when it came to our crazy travel schedule, giving us a week’s worth of assignments at a time, when we let them know when we could not make it back twice in one week.

What to Expect on Visits to the Center

During your child’s twice-weekly visits to the center, he or she will turn in his or her homework to the instructor who will review it to make sure your child is on course.  The center instructor may work on speed drills with your child and watch him or her work through another set of worksheets.

what to expect at Kumon

Do not expect the center instructor to teach the materials to your child in the same manner as in a traditional classroom.  The instructors do not lecture, demonstrate or tutor students through the curriculum.  The Kumon method utilizes in the “learn-by-doing” approach.  The instructor provides guidance, praise and assistance, if absolutely needed.

According to the parent materials provided, the Kumon approach believes that having a child try to solve the problems on his or her own teaches them to think for themselves and build confidence.

How Much Does Kumon Cost?

Let’s face it, cost factors into the equation for most of it.  Each Kumon center is independently owned and operated, so costs will vary by location.  In general, though, expect to pay $95 – $125 per month, per subject, plus a $30 – $50 one-time registration fee.

Does Kumon Really Work?

At the beginning of our trial of Kumon, my daughter was entering 8th grade Pre-Algebra.  After her initial placement evaluation, the instructors at the center thought she should start with addition of single-digit positive numbers (almost near the beginning).  She understood single-addition math just fine, but the center instructor wanted her to be able to do the math faster before moving on.  After attending the orientation and reading through all of the parent materials, I understood why our instructor made this decision but, unfortunately, my daughter did not.  She was embarrassed and her self esteem was very low.

We worked through the program with as much consistency as possible.  I’ll readily admit that we were not as consistent with the program as we should have been and we may have bitten off more than we could chew this school year.  After nine months with Kumon we did not see a dramatic increase in her Pre-Algebra grade, but we weren’t expecting to either.  It’s not a tutoring program, remember?

I have noticed other, smaller changes, though.  Her confidence in math is slowly starting to improve and she’s extremely quick and accurate with her addition, subtraction, multiplication and division, which does help avoid simple calculation errors on her regular school math assignments .

As mentioned before, Kumon has been around for over 50 years.  A program that doesn’t deliver results wouldn’t survive that long.  It’s important, to remember that individual results will vary and completing those daily assignments and staying on course is vital to your child’s success in the program.

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Disclosure: I was provided 9 months of the Kumon math program for the purposes of this review.  All opinions in this blog post are strictly my own.

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What if the parents have no Math knowledge will they enroll their students in Kumon?

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I agree that Kumon has a great after school program for kids to help them improve their school works. However, I tried Beestar during pandemic and surprisingly, it worked much better for my kids. The fact that it is all online and free of charge, my kids can focus on their studies by staying at home and I did save decent amount of money.

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Meet Your Local Instructor

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How does Kumon work?

does kumon help with homework

Our worksheet-based study programmes have evolved over the course of over 60 years, learning from our students about how best to help them succeed, build confidence and develop self-learning skills for a bright future. The Kumon programmes are for every child, whether gifted or in need of extra help, and every child will follow their own path of learning, working at a pace and level which is just right for them. In this way, we will ensure they develop a firm foundation in maths and English while becoming an independent, confident learner equipped for success. The Kumon worksheets are traditionally studied on paper with a pencil and eraser so that children can work with speed and focus and are encouraged to spot and correct any mistakes as they go. KUMON CONNECT allows the student to access and work on the same worksheets and study programme with a tablet and stylus. The Instructor can set and adjust new work remotely and each student can work on the go submitting their completed work daily. How it works 1. Easing them in

Following an initial diagnostic test, your child will study familiar work to build their confidence, develop their study skills and build work habits. From day one, the Kumon Instructor will be working on building your child’s concentration, ensuring they sit with a good posture and work at a steady rhythm, as they get into the habit of studying every day and understand how to progress through the worksheets. 2. Encouraging independence As students move on to work they haven’t seen before, they begin to learn new topics by themself, by following the instructions and examples on the worksheets. Here, students will be building on what they’ve learned in the previous worksheets, they will be correcting their own mistakes and will know how to use the hints given. They will also develop the ability to work under timed conditions. 3. Having confidence in their own abilities As students advance, they are able to apply their knowledge to review the questions and select the most appropriate methods and techniques to tackle high-level work. By this stage, they will be able to take ownership of their own learning and set their own goals. They will be increasingly independent and will tackle work with an ‘I can do it’ attitude. 4. The support of a Kumon parent While the Instructor supports and guides your child, parents also play an important role in supporting learning at home. 

  •  Creating the right environment -  helping them to establish a quiet space they can work that allows them to give their full attention to their daily study.
  •  Schedule their study time - supporting them to create a study routine where they can give a short amount of focussed time.
  •  Encourage them to complete corrections promptly -  once the worksheets are marked, your child should correct their mistakes before progressing so are able to learn from the corrections. If your child experiences particular difficulties with a particular question or worksheet, they can let the Instructor know and it can be addressed during the next class.

Focusing on the improvements a parent notices in their child, no matter how small, helps build confidence in their own abilities and maintains their motivation and enthusiasm for learning. At Kumon, we want your child’s learning to be a positive experience. Setting medium and long-term goals in consultation with your child will allow the Instructor to make a study projection to achieve these. The Instructor provides feedback and guidance based on their observations (paying attention to the development of your child’s study skills, how they tackle new work, their ability to self-correct and their growing maths and English proficiency) to help build their academic and self-learning skills.  As a Kumon student progresses through their Kumon journey, they will increasingly take charge of their own learning, as they become an independent learner. Discover your child’s potential and book a FREE Assessment   with your local study centre.

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Top 5 Kumon Alternatives And Competitors For 2024 | Programs like Kumon

  • Shefali Sundram
  • August 27, 2024

Reviewed By

Explore Kumon Alternatives

Kumon is a private tutoring company that offers math and reading programs for students of all ages. The company has over 4 million students enrolled in its programs worldwide.

The program has been around for decades. It is known for its rigorous math and reading programs that can help students improve their skills at their own pace. 

Kumon is known for its rigorous curriculum and its focus on independent learning . Students work on worksheets at their own pace, and they are expected to master each level before moving on to the next.

Kumon can be a great option for students who are struggling in math or reading, or who want to improve their skills at their own pace.

However, it is important to note that Kumon is not a cheap option. The cost of the program varies depending on the location and the student’s age, but it can be several hundred dollars per month.

Pros  of Kumon

  • Kumon online tutoring offers personalized learning plans tailored to each student’s knowledge level and goals, allowing them to work at their own pace with individualized tutor support.
  • Kumon helps students master basic concepts through repetitive worksheets, making it easier for them to grasp more complex topics later on.

Cons of Kumon

  • The Kumon method may cause stress among the students if some students cannot solve the worksheet on time, then the pressure among the students might increase.
  • Kumon’s method involves repeatedly working through the same worksheet until mastery is achieved, which can sometimes lead to boredom and a loss of interest for students.

However, Kumon is not the only game in town. There are a number of other math tutoring programs that offer similar services like Kumon but with their own unique twists.

Building upon the valuable insights from our ‘ Best Online Tutoring Services ‘ blog, this article presents ‘ 5 Best Kumon Alternatives for Tutoring. ‘

Each alternative is carefully selected to cater to different learning needs and styles, ensuring that your child receives the best possible support in their educational journey. The article extensively covers Kumon competitors as well.

Looking for private tutors? Book a Free Trial Lesson and match with top tutors for concepts, homework help and grade improvement on Wiingy today!

Alternative #1:  Wiingy

Kumon alternatives #1 - Wiingy

What is Wiingy?

The Wiingy platform offers private tutoring to school students, college students, and young adults through its network of 4,500+ expert-vetted tutors for coding, math, science, computer science, AP, language learning, and 350+ subjects. 

Over 20,000 students have used Wiingy for 1-on-1 tutoring , homework help , assignment help , language learning , homeschool tutoring , and test prep . Students and parents have consistently rated the Wiingy experience as 4.8 out of 5. 

In contrast to tutor marketplaces, Wiingy tutors undergo an intensive assessment process that includes interviews, mock lessons, and coding tests. Fewer than 3% of applicants pass this assessment to become Wiingy tutors . This means that you work only with highly qualified, experienced and verified tutors. 

Book a Free Trial Lesson with Wiingy.

Pros and Cons of Wiingy


– The most important USP of Wiingy is the expert high quality tutor network.
– Each tutor has to go through personal interview before being accepted on the Wiingy platform
Some students prefer to shortlist and work with tutors directly, which is not feasible on the Wiingy platform.

– The Wiingy Platform takes the ownership of matching students with the ideal tutor.
– Student need only provide a description of what they want to learn. 
– The platform then expertly selects a tutor who meets these specific requirements, even offering a free trial lesson to get started.
Wiingy does not offer long term subscriptions. 

– You get a Free Trial Lesson with any tutor you choose
– Lessons start at just $28/hour. 
– You can sign up for as little as one lesson to and sign up for more based on your need and the experience with your tutor.

How much does Wiingy cost?

Wiingy offers affordable tutoring at just $28 per hour, with the added benefit of a free trial lesson to familiarize yourself with the tutoring style before committing. 

Flexibility is key, as there are no minimum package requirements or yearly subscriptions; you can sign up for lessons on a per-hour basis, even for just one lesson. 

If you find yourself unsatisfied with your tutor, Wiingy’s Perfect Match Guarantee Program allows for a free replacement tutor. 

Moreover, the platform offers a no-questions-asked refund policy valid within 10 days of lesson purchase .

Note: Pricing info was retrieved from the Wiingy website in Aug 2024 and may change over time.

Kumon vs Wiingy 

Kumon and Wiingy are two platforms that cater to different educational needs.

Kumon is a self-paced learning program that focuses on repetitive practice and mastery of basic skills. It offers a wide range of subjects, including mathematics, reading, and language arts. Kumon centers are individually owned and operated, and the tutoring prices range from $150 to $200 per subject.

The Wiingy platform offers  online 1-on-1 tutoring in 350+ subjects including math, coding, science, computer science, AP and language learning.

It has rigorous tutor selection process where every tutor has to go through a personal interview. Less than 3% of applicants qualify to be a tutor on the Wiingy platform. This guarantees that you receive instruction from the highest-quality educators.

Wiingy’s lessons start at just $28 per hour, and you can begin learning with just one lesson. No need to sign up for long term subscriptions or packages.

Bottom line:

While Kumon offers a self-paced learning , Wiingy stands out for its exceptional tutor quality and affordability, backed by a well-structured tutor matching system.

Alternative #2: Russian School of Math

Kumon alternatives #2 - RSM

What is the Russian School of Math?

The Russian School of Math is a math education system that originated in the Soviet Union and is now taught in many American schools and specialized math centers. The system emphasizes problem-solving and critical thinking skills and is designed to teach students to work independently. Russian Math education begins in pre-kindergarten and continues through 12th grade, with no grade benchmarks. Instead, students are on a continuous schedule that relies less on exams and more on classroom collaboration. The program focuses more on the “why” of math problems, rather than just the “how”. The main difference between Russian Math and the math being taught in schools is the methodology that emphasizes derivation. Russian Math is known for its rigor, and challenging problem sets that push students to think creatively and deeply about math concepts.

The  Russian School of Math is completely classroom-based . The platform does offer online classes, but even in the online classes, they teach a group of 12 students together.

  • You can enroll in algebra, geometry, or both, with classes varying from 2 hours to 4 hours per week combined.
  • A classroom environment is key to their methodology. Classes consist of an average of 12 students, with an expert teacher leading an interactive lesson.
  • Homework is assigned each week to reinforce what was taught in class.

The Russian School of Math’s curriculum is inspired by elite mathematical schools in the former Soviet Union and adapted for the U.S. educational environment.

Pros and Cons of Russian School of Math

Russian math emphasizes a problem-solving approach that can help students develop strong critical thinking and analytical skills. By approaching complex problems with logic and creativity, students can become better equipped to tackle a wide range of challenges in all areas of their lives.Russian math programs can be very challenging and require a significant amount of time and effort. This can be overwhelming for some students, especially if they are already busy with other extracurricular activities or academic responsibilities.
Russian math programs can provide students with strong preparation for competitive exams such as the SAT, ACT, and various math competitions. Russian math programs follow a standardized curriculum that may not be customized as per individual students’ learning styles or abilities.
Russian math is recognized worldwide for its rigor and effectiveness in developing strong mathematical skills.Russian math programs typically focus exclusively on mathematics and may not provide as much exposure or instruction in other subjects such as science, history, or language arts. 

How much does the Russian School of Math cost?

The pricing for Russian math programs can vary depending on the specific program, location, and level of instruction. Here is and indicative pricing chart from Kindergarten to Grade 12

Kindergarten- 11.5 hours $1872 $52 monthly
Grade 2-6 2 hours$2298$80 monthly 
Grade 7-12 4 hours $3708 $103 monthly 

Note: Pricing info was retrieved from one of the centers of the Russian School of Math website in June 2023 and may change over time. Please contact your nearest Russian School of Math for more info.

Kumon vs Russian School of Math

Kumon and the Russian School of Math are two distinct educational programs, each with its own approach to teaching mathematics.

Kumon is a self-paced program that emphasizes repetition and mastery of math basics. It originated in Japan and is designed to help students develop strong foundational skills and become independent learners. Kumon offers a wide range of subjects, including mathematics, reading, and language arts.

On the other hand, the Russian School of Math (RSM) focuses more on math conceptual understanding and problem-solving skills. It was founded by two mathematicians who immigrated to the United States from Russia. RSM’s curriculum is based on the methods and techniques used in the Soviet Union to train future mathematicians.

In summary, while Kumon emphasizes repetition and mastery of math basics, the Russian School of Math focuses on conceptual understanding and problem-solving skills. The choice between the two would depend on the specific learning needs and preferences of the student.

Russian Math is a challenging but rewarding math program that emphasizes problem-solving and critical thinking skills. It’s a good fit for students who are motivated, self-disciplined, and comfortable working independently. The program is rigorous and requires a significant amount of time and effort, so it’s not for everyone. But for those who are up for the challenge, Russian Math can be a great way to develop strong mathematical skills and prepare for competitive exams.

Alternative #3: Mathnasium

Kumon alternatives #3 - Mathnasium

What is Mathnasium?

Mathnasium is a supplemental math learning franchise consisting of over 1,000 learning centers in the United States.  The primary goal of Mathnasium is to help students build a solid foundation in math and develop strong mathematical skills.

Their teaching approach is designed to help students develop a deep understanding of math concepts and build confidence in their math abilities.

Mathnasium learning centers offer a  supportive learning environment where students can work at their own pace, ask questions, and receive personalized instruction from trained math instructors.

The Mathnasium Method focuses on three main components: assessment, customized learning plans, and ongoing support. 

The program begins with an assessment to identify the student’s strengths, weaknesses, and gaps in their math knowledge. Based on the assessment results, a personalized learning plan is created for students, targeting their specific needs and goals.

Pros and Cons of Mathnasium

Mathnasium’s program is customized to each student’s individual needs and learning style.Mathnasium doesn’t teach any other subject except math. So it may not be suitable for some of the students.
Mathnasium’s program emphasizes mastery of key mathematical concepts, rather than just memorization or rote learning.Mathnasium doesn’t provide one-on-one tutoring.
Mathnasium offers flexible scheduling, with sessions available during after-school hours and on weekends. 

How much does Mathanasium cost?

Mathnasium pricing varies by location, as each center sets its  own fees based on factors such as local operating costs and the services offered.

Mathnasium monthly plan includes regular sessions with a Mathnasium instructor, personalized learning plans, and ongoing progress monitoring.

Note: Pricing info was retrieved from the Mathnasium website in Novemeber 2023 may change over time.

Kumon vs Mathnasium

Kumon and Mathnasium are two distinct educational programs, each with its own approach to teaching mathematics.

Kumon is a self-paced learning program that emphasizes repetitive practice and mastery of basic skills. It offers a wide range of subjects, including mathematics, reading, and language arts. Kumon centers are individually owned and operated, and the tutoring prices range from $150 to $200 per subject.

On the other hand, Mathnasium emphasizes one-on-one tutoring and focuses on making math fun. It offers only math tutoring and uses rewards to encourage students to make progress. Mathnasium’s teaching philosophy and methodology include a thorough evaluation, individualized lesson plans, personal one-on-one tuition, organized coursework, competency-based education, frequent assessment of developments, and optimal conditions for education.

While Kumon emphasizes repetition and mastery of math basics, Mathnasium focuses on conceptual understanding and problem-solving skills. The choice between the two would depend on the specific learning needs and preferences of the student.

If you want to know more about these tutoring companies, you can check out our blog Kumon vs Mathnasium .

Mathnasium is a math tutoring franchise that offers personalized instruction and a supportive learning environment for students of all ages.The program is customized to each student’s individual needs and learning style, and it emphasizes mastery of key mathematical concepts rather than just memorization. However, Mathnasium pricing varies by location, but monthly plans typically include regular sessions with a Mathnasium instructor, personalized learning plans, and ongoing progress monitoring.

Alternative #4: Sylvan Learning Center

Kumon alternatives #4 - Sylvan Learning

What is Sylvan Learning Center?

Sylvan is a private tutoring company. It provides personalized instruction to students of all ages and skill levels. All Sylvan Learning centers are locally owned and operated, so pricing varies by location. 

The tutoring program at Sylvan is designed to help students build confidence in their academic performance.

Sylvan Learning offers a range of services, such as  academic tutoring, test prep, STEM programs, and college admission counseling.

Sylvan has certified teachers. They use different techniques like interactive technology and hands-on activities to help students.

Pros and Cons of Sylvan Learning Center

Sylvan Learning provides customized instruction tailored to the needs of each student. This approach helps ensure students receive the support they need to build their skills and confidence.The cost of Sylvan Learning varies significantly between different learning centers.
Sylvan Learning offers flexible scheduling, including after-school and weekend sessions, to accommodate busy schedules and help students balance their academic and extracurricular activities.While Sylvan Learning has many locations worldwide, it may not be available in all areas. Students may need to travel a significant distance to access Sylvan’s services.
Sylvan Learning uses technology, including online tools and resources, to enhance the learning experience and engage students in the material.Sylvan’s teaching approach may not be suitable for all students, particularly those who require more hands-on learning experiences.

How much does Sylvan Learning Center cost?

All Sylvan Learning centers are locally owned and operated, so pricing varies by location. It’s best to contact your nearest Sylvan learning center for specifics.

Here is a general idea of the pricing you can expect at a Sylvan center

Personalized tutoring$49 per hour
Academic Coaching$199 per month 
STEM program$99 per month 
Test Prep$999 

Note: Pricing info was retrieved from the Sylvan Learning website in November 2023 and may change over time.

Kumon vs Sylvan Learning Center 

Kumon and Sylvan Learning Center are two popular educational platforms that offer personalized learning plans to students. While both platforms are designed to help students improve their academic skills, they differ in their approach to teaching.

Kumon is a self-paced learning program that emphasizes repetitive practice and mastery of basic skills1. It offers a wide range of subjects, including mathematics, reading, and language arts1. Kumon centers are individually owned and operated, and the tutoring prices range from $150 to $200 per subject.

On the other hand, Sylvan Learning Center offers one-on-one and small-group tutoring options to students of all ages. They have a team of certified teachers who provide personalized instruction in reading, writing, math, study skills, and test preparation for college entrance and state exams. Sylvan Learning Center offers both offline and online tutoring services. In terms of pricing, Sylvan Learning Center charges $40 to $100 per hour for private tutoring and STEM programs.

The main difference between Kumon and Sylvan Learning Center is the mode of teaching. While Kumon offers only in-person tutoring services, Sylvan Learning Center offers both offline and online tutoring services.

Both Kumon and Sylvan Learning Center are good platforms for kids, but the best choice depends on your child’s specific needs and preferences. If you want to know more about these tutoring companies, you can check out our blog Kumon vs Sylvan Learning Center .

Sylvan Learning Center is a good option for students who need personalized attention and flexible scheduling. However, it’s important to consider the cost and teaching approach before enrolling.

Alternative #5: Huntington Learning Center

Kumon alternatives #5 - Huntington Learning center

What is Huntington Learning Center?

Huntington Learning Center is an  educational learning center in the United States offering in-center and online tutoring services.  Huntington is among the oldest providers of tutoring services in the U.S. 

Huntington offers tutoring help from Pre-K to 12th grade in subjects like reading, writing, math, science, and test prep for SAT, PSAT, and ACT. 

Huntington Learning Center was founded in 1977 by Dr. Raymond Huntington and his wife, Eileen. The couple opened a second center in 1978 and began franchising locations in 1985. They have 300 centers across the country.

Pros and cons of Huntington Learning Center

Huntington provides tutoring from Pre-K to 12th grade.Huntington charges an initial assessment fee starting from $150.
Huntington has a tailored tutoring program unique to your individual learning style.You have limited ability to define a learning schedule and have to pick a lesson frequency prescribed by Huntington. 

How much does Huntington Learning Center cost?

After the initial assessment, Huntington provides a schedule that details how many tutoring sessions you will need, and based on the number of tutoring sessions, they decide the tutoring cost.

Here is a general idea of the pricing range of Huntington Learning Center.

Initial assessment feeStarting from $150 
Personalized academic tutoringRanges from $40 to $75 per hour
ACT or SAT prep (14 hours)$1,220 per subject
SAT or ACT prep (32 hours)$2,645 per subject

Note: Pricing info is subject to change. Please check with Huntington Learning Center for updated info.

Kumon vs Huntington Learning Center

Kumon and Huntington Learning Center are two popular educational platforms that offer personalized learning plans to students. While both platforms are designed to help students improve their academic skills, they differ in their approach to teaching.

Huntington Learning Center, on the other hand, offers one-on-one and small-group tutoring options to students of all ages. They have a team of certified teachers who provide personalized instruction in reading, writing, math, study skills, and test preparation for college entrance and state exams. Huntington Learning Center offers both offline and online tutoring services1. In terms of pricing, Huntington Learning Center charges $40 to $75 per hour for private tutoring sessions in reading, math, study skills, writing, phonics, and vocabulary.

The main difference between Kumon and Huntington Learning Center is that Kumon is a self-paced program that focuses on the mastery of basic skills, while Huntington Learning Center is a more traditional tutoring program that offers one-on-one or small group instruction.

Both Kumon and Huntington Learning Center are good platforms for kids, but the best choice depends on your child’s specific needs and preferences. If you want to know more about these tutoring companies, you can check out our blog on Kumon vs Huntington Learning Center .

Huntington Learning Center is an educational learning center offering in-center and online tutoring services. Huntington Learning Center is a good option for students who need help in a variety of subjects and who are looking for a personalized tutoring program. However, Huntington is also one of the more expensive tutoring services available, and it does not offer as much flexibility in scheduling as some other tutoring services.

After thorough research and analysis, we believe that if you’re looking for alternatives to Kumon for math and reading tutoring, Wiingy, Russian Math, Mathnasium, Sylvan Learning, and Huntington Learning Center are all great options to consider.

Each platform offers its own unique features and benefits, making it easy to find the right program and learning experience for your child’s needs.

For example,

  • Wiingy : An online tutoring platform that connects students with  expert vetted tutors  for a wide range of subjects . Its rigorous tutor selection process where every tutor is interviewed individually ensures the highest quality of instruction. With flexible scheduling, a free trial lesson, and pricing  starting at just $28 per hour, Wiingy  offers exceptional value.
  • Russian Math : It is completely classroom-based . The platform does offer online classes, but even in the online classes, they teach a group of 12 students together. It emphasizes problem-solving and critical thinking skills, and is designed to teach students to work independently.
  • Mathnasium : It is a math-only tutoring company that uses a mastery-based approach . It is a good option for students who are struggling in math or who want to improve their math skills.
  • Sylvan Learning : Sylvan Learning is a one-on-one tutoring company that offers a variety of subjects, including math, reading, writing, and test prep. It is a good option for students who are looking for a personalized approach to learning.
  • Huntington Learning Center : Huntington Learning Center is a one-on-one tutoring company that offers a variety of subjects, including math, reading, writing, and test prep. It is a good option for students who are looking for a traditional tutoring experience.

Whether you’re looking for a personalized approach to learning, test preparation, or a wide range of subjects at an affordable price, these Kumon alternatives have got everything to help your child succeed.

Frequently Asked Questions(FAQs)

How does kumon work.

Kumon students work on worksheets at their own pace. Each worksheet is designed to build on the previous one, so students gradually progress through the material.

How much does Kumon cost?

The cost of Kumon varies depending on the location and the level of the program.

Additional articles

  • Varsity Tutors Alternatives
  • Remind tutoring alternative
  • Wyzant Alternatives
  • Chegg Alternatives
  • IXL Alternatives
  • Preply Alternatives
  • Khan Academy Alternatives
  • Huntington Learning Center Alternatives
  • Favtutor Alternatives
  • Heytutor Alternatives
  • Time4learning Alternatives

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r/Kumon is a place to get help with your Kumon, discuss Kumon topics and anything regarding Kumon. Both students and instructors welcome! "Someday we'll all get out of that place, the kids, graders, even the instructors. Kumon can't imprison us forever..." ~Shadowhawk22JFK

On average how much homework does a Kumon student employee grade?

I used to work at Kumon but it has been almost 5 or 6 years since I have worked there. I know I had to grade a lot of homework when I worked there but cannot remember how many packets or assignments I did per week or shift. For the people, that work at Kumon or did work, around how many packets do or did you grade on average? I need to list how many i used to, which led me to ask.

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8 Things to Hate about Kumon – A Review

I ran a kumon centre.

Now in some circles being a Kumon Instructor is tantamount to a sub criminal activity! Kumon seems to be something that people either love or hate . I’ve started answering questions on parenting forums and sometimes there are  parent’s asking for a kumon review. The responses often go: I hate it!

Photo Credit: Manu-chan ????

So what’s my Kumon review after my time on the inside?

Whenever I read the pros and cons of the Kumon method, I agree with the moderate opinions on both sides; it’s not the answer to all maths problems but it’s not a rip-off or scam either!

However instead of providing an insider’s impartial Kumon review, here are my 8 things to hate about Kumon, along with, what you can learn and use from the Kumon method when tutoring your own child!

1) Kumon is expensive

2) kumon instructors aren’t qualified maths teachers.

Most Kumon instructors, although trained in the Kumon method, are not maths teachers. As a parent you may feel that because you’re not a qualified teacher or a mathematician, then you can’t tutor your own child, but Yes You Can! Who cares more about your child’s learning? In addition, learning alongside your child sets an amazingly positive example to your child!

3) Kumon instructors don’t teach

In fact instructors spend around  a maximum of 10 minutes with each student each session.  As a parent tutor, there will be times when you can tutor your child while preparing a meal. or running your business. Children love being independent, but not always when it comes to school work. We feel that it’s necessary to fill our children’s heads with information, but many times it’s better to encourage children to try to work things out by themselves with guidance where needed.

4) Kumon is repetitive and boring

5) kumon is a franchise so results depend on which centre you study at.

Different Kumon instructors have different personalities, some are very strict which is a problem if your child is sensitive and some are gentle which can be a problem if your child needs a firm hand!   As your child’s tutor, you’re in the best position to judge your child’s changing moods and to devise a flexible program (e.g. we won’t do drills today, let’s play cards instead!)

6) Kumon doesn’t do (much) problem solving

Kumon does this so kids can focus on improving their arithmetic, which means when they come across a maths problem, the arithmetic part of the question will be easy. Of course, as your child’s tutor you can also cover the important skill of  problem solving .

7) Kumon uses different methods from those used at school

In maths, there can be many different ways to solve problems.  Of course it makes sense to follow the methods your child’s school uses, but also looking at other techniques will help your child when faced with different maths problems.

8 ) Kumon turns out arithmeticians not mathematicians

The Kumon method doesn’t cover telling the time, data handling, maths investigations, or (much geometry) but Kumon students will be fast at arithmetic. This in turn improves children’s maths confidence. Make sure that your child’s arithmetic is strong which in turn will support their learning in the other areas of mathematics.

If you’re a  parent trying to make the decision about whether Kumon is right for your family? Check out Maths Insider’s  Ultimate Kumon Review .

So tell me, do you still hate Kumon?

More on Kumon:

About Kumon The Good, The Bad and The Ugly 

Is Thinkster Math a Real Alternative to Kumon?

Please note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive or off-topic.

126 thoughts on “ 8 Things to Hate about Kumon – A Review ”

Honestly, I had never heard of Kumon until your post. I live in a small town in Montana though, so that might explain it. It sounds interesting though!

Yes, not everyone has heard of Kumon, even in the big cities where they have a large presence!

Hi i didn’t mean to post this in someones comment space but i just needed to make a opinion heard. Kumon is terrible my kids went there and they hated it teacher were mean and everything they didn’t even tell them on their first day their were to put their things. They learned nothing!!!!!!!! ! Kumon get a better system- their “success” stories are rubbish

Although the title says ” 8 Things to Hate About Kumon-A review” in reality it has promoted Kumon program on the web and I’m not surprised that some people who have never heard of Kumon are planning to enroll their child in the program. From my understanding of Kumon methodology and philosophy I will try to answer a few points to counter what has been said in the article. 1. Kumon is Expensive: Even a Piano lesson, Karate lesson or Swimming class or any sports coaching is equally expensive if not more. For acquiring skills in Math & Reading which will last life time, you need to spend for the future of your child. 2. Kumon instructors are not qualified Math Teachers: True, not all of them are qualified Math teachers, in fact many of them aren’t teachers by profession in the first place but to become qualified Kumon instructors they go through rigorous training in Math, Reading and Kumon methodology, are a part of continuous professional development to develop their skills & knowledge in the subjects as well as instruction. Only people who can pass the different phases of Kumon training end of becoming instructors, many of them are highly qualified professional who decide to become entrepreneurs in the education industry. 3.Kumon Instructors don’t teach: Kumon methodology is not about teaching rather making one an independent learner as opposed to hold the student’s hand through the learning process. Kumon instructors are guides or mentors. Kumon worksheets are designed in such a way that most of the average students can learn on their own from the worksheets, however Kumon instructors do explain the new concepts, they offer passive help and get the answer out of the students rather than giving them the answers. 4. Kumon is repetitive and boring: Yes, it is repetitive because Kumon emphasizes on mastering a skill before moving forward and you only master a skill by doing it repetitively. Think about any skill that you want to master or that you have already mastered by doing it only once! It can still be made interesting, it depends on how you handle it. 5.Kumon doesn’t do much problem solving: If it refers to solving word problems, then yes,Kumon curriculum doesn’t have much word problem because it’s goal for a student in Math is to reach Calculus level before reaching High school so the topics that aren’t directly related to Calculus are omitted and thus it’s supplemental education so that your child still needs to go to school to learn other topics. However it takes care of the advanced computational skills that you need even in your day to day life and a skill that lasts lifetime. 6.Kumon uses different methods from those used at School: A child is exposed to different method and Kumon method turns out to be simpler and helps faster computation. As such the methodology changes from Board to board and time to time for example many parents complain that their kids are learning mathematical operations in a different way than what they learned during their school days which proves my point. Good students always take advantage of knowing different methods of solving the same problem.

Some have complained that their kids are taught by High School students employed by Kumon centers. These high school students are part time employees to take care of lot of preparatory work for the class, they are not supposed to instruct. Kumon method doesn’t permit any untrained staff to be involved in instruction moreover to work in the center each and every staff member goes through in house training. Finally, the aim of Kumon is just not teaching Math & Reading but much beyond that. It aims to develop student’s work skills, concentration & focus, to become an independent learner and finally an achiever because KUMON truly believes that EVERY CHILD CAN BE AN ACHIEVER!

Well said! It is expensive but what else is not expensive.

Do you have your own franchise? I am looking into starting one in the US, and would like to learn what others’ challenges and successes are with the program.

Hi Brian, If you are a KUMON parent and want to improve the service – please take a minute and fill out this survey: http://fb.me/2LpSmrkaT

I am currently volunteering as a designer to build a similar service to help children learn math. You contribution could be of great value.

brian, Perhaps you need to take Kumon, and repeat middle school. Read what you posted.

I think kumon sucks! ive been going kumon since 2006 im on the Level H book right now, im nt getting anywere in life i im 14years old.

i have been going there since 2006, and i am on Level M, when my dad said I could stop at the end of March, it turns out that they make you pay for the last month, so I have another stupid month of this repetitive crap that doesnt help me. It used to, but NOT anymore, by the way im 14 too

Hi Amulya, If you use KUMON and want to improve the service – please take this 2 minute survey: http://fb.me/2LpSmrkaT

My son is 10 and is completing math level J. He is bored at school when it comes to math. His teacher has difficulty assigning him problems because they are too easy for him. During lessons, he practically completes the problems in his head before the teacher completes her sentence while the other students take 25 minutes to solve the problem on paper. He uses the time to complete his homework at school. Kumon homework is a daily 5 to 20 minutes (times 2 for reading) routine for him depending on his progression in mastering the subject matter. He doesn’t enjoy it but he doesn’t enjoy his school work either. It’s become a way of life. He does complain the current Kumon subject matter is useless because he will not learn in school for another two to three years. I pointed out he learned his current school curriculum three years ago and it’s positively benefitting him now. I am surprise from a few earlier comments where students take hours to do daily Kumon worksheets yet excel in their scores and wonder why they are not advancing levels faster. There is a positive correlation between the time it takes to complete worksheets and the number of errors incurred. The longer they take usually means they have not mastered the material and experience increased number of errors. Taking hours to complete worksheets yet no get any wrong doesn’t make any sense.

well, different for my son. First and foremost it was his decision to enroll Kumon. He started when he was 6 yo at Math level 4A after 1 year and 3 months he is now at level H-same as you do. It’s really weird looking at a 7 yo doing simultaneous linear equations, functions, graphs etc. Aside Math Kumon, he is also doing Reading Kumon and is now level E2, he also do piano and voice lessons once a week. On top of that we only limit him to 2 hours per week of TV or general rating online games.

I think it is your attitude that ‘sucks’ and that attitude will set you back in ways you will never truly understand unless you step back from it and take a good look at yourself. Kumon is about self-learning. Self-learning? Just Mathematics and English? No. It is learning about yourself. It is also about empowerment through that process of learning about yourself and the positive results you can achieve for yourself through your own efforts. This is brought about by gaining confidence in yourself which enhances your self-esteem. With that self-esteem, you are able to look beyond your selfish “shoot yourself in the foot” self in order to be able to examine and explore your potential. This leads you to tremendous success in every field in your life. Use Kumon as a tool to achieve this. Instructors are parents just like yours. They reinforce and validate the guidance your parents give you.

Well, I agree with what you posted and I can see the benefits of kumon. However, my son absolutely hates it although he grudgingly admits his maths has improved. I’m thinking of getting a computer program called CAMI (for maths and english), if anyone has heard of it or has some knowledge of it, I’d love to hear about it.

Dalya, my friend’s son’s school uses CAMI. She says it’s great and like Kumon builds up their basic skills. Regarding your son hating Kumon, try the following: Move him back half or quarter of a level – maybe the work he’s on is a little above his comfort zone. Split the sheet and do it in 2 sessions in the day For a few days, you be his scribe and let him tell u what to write on the sheet or do the sheet orally If the time is out by just 1 or 2 mins, and he’s repeated the sheet 5 times, just write down the expected time (WARNING This is cheating!!!) Hope this helps!

Hi Dayla, I have heard of CAMI-the computer program to develop Math skill. I don’t know how effective can it be especially for younger students. Won’t it be like online education versus classroom education? Kumon is an individualized program where the instructor plans lessons periodically for each and every student after evaluating the student’s work personally, identifying the weaknesses and skill gaps and also analyzing why a student makes certain types of mistakes and how to rectify it. Is CAMI going to offer this personal-human touch to your son’s learning process, is it going to motivate your child by mentoring him? Is CAMI going to develop your son’s focus and concentration skills, discipline and make him an independent learner? As I had said earlier, apart from developing the skills in reading and math, Kumon aims to develop the soft skills that last a life time.

Hi Meesh, My Children have done both Kumon and CAMI, I prefer CAMI, as I found with Kumon if my children were home doing their work and they were making mistakes they would make the same mistakes throughout the whole exercise until they were marked by either myself or by the Kumon tutor at the next session. To me this is a waste of time as they have been repeating the wrong thing over and over without realising it. CAMI on the other hand presents the solution straight away if they have made a mistake with the screen flashing red, instantly alerting the student they have done something wrong and they can refer to the solution to correct themselves.

Further if the parent is like to monitor children progress they can do it at any point of time by generating a report, as CAMI constantly monitors the student progress whenever they are doing the exercise.

I like to keep an eye on the children’s work and progress and find it much easier with CAMI. With Kumon, I had to check through their work and see if the were making mistakes which was very time consuming.

I find CAMI more individualized than Kumon, on the contrary to your perception Meesh, as they prepare courses for each of the children (normally a couple weeks worth of work) which is sent by email. Subsequent work is tailored and based on their performance is the previous course they have completed and submitted.

They also have tutors available on the phone and also via email. I have had to use these sparingly as my Maths is thank god is good enough to assist the kids if they have any question (at the moment at least LOL). I have used these mainly to request my preference for the volume of work set and also for some technical advice on the program.

Kumon was great in its time, but it really hasn’t changed much since my brother and sister did it 20 years ago… CAMI I believe is newer, computerised, improved version of Kumon for today… that being said, it still requires a certain commitment from parents to ensure the child is doing their work and generate and look at the reports…. which is not too difficult …

To those parents who comment about hating it … my comment is the same as to my about Chinese school on Saturdays … if the parents worried whether their kids love or hated it there would be no schools or they would be empty… Sydney however has so many Chinese schools full of kids, who are learning something that will help them greatly in later life and also teach them about the culture. Although they hate it now they will thank there parents later in life… ( as I did)

Have you looked at http://www.lymboo.com . They have a very extensive math curriculum and it’s structured, and everything is online. Their content and assignments are much superior to Kumon. Also, their methodology of focusing on retention of what’s learned is also unique. Being online, all performance reports are available instantly.

Interesting. I had never heard of the Kumon method either. Wikipedia has a decent entry . Evidently about four millions students use it world wide.

I’d guess it’s the #1 maths supplemental program in terms of sheer numbers of students. I suppose the question is love it or hate it, has it helped raise maths achievement levels overall?

Practice does not make perfect, practice makes permanent. If you practice the wrong technique over and over you will just ingrain the bad habit.

I have always considered myself mathematically challenged. However, my son is a born mathematician (maybe skips a generation?) in working with him, I have improved my own skills tremendously, though wish I had a greater depth of knowledge from which to draw in assisting him. He is rapidly approaching the limit of my math skills as he is in 2nd grade and can already do many pre-algebra and basic algebra problems.

Are there any programs that can be recommended for someone who wants real math help but not of the boring drill type?

I always feel a warm glow when I hear of “non specialists” successfully helping their child with maths. Well Done!

I’m guessing you’re in the States but the British BBC Schools KS3 Maths website is a great resource and is used by many children to revise for the numerous UK government tests and assessments. It has explanations, activities and tests, all broken down into “bitesize” chunks. The Key Stage 3 (KS3) site is for 11-16 year olds which I think you and your son might be able to tackle but also take a look at their KS2 site for 7-11 year olds.

Anyone know of any US sites which could help?

I can highly recommend Mangahigh.com: its a games-based curriculum compliant Mathematics resource!

Stopping by from SITS and 31DBBB. THANK YOU for this post! My oldest daughter struggles with math. A LOT and my husband and I have considered a tutoring situation such as Kumon for her. Thank you for the links! I think I’ll put some of them into use and see how things go. :)

Welcome! Yes it’s great finding new blogs from the 31dbbb challenge! Summer break is a good time to catch up on maths skills. Just do a little every day and mix it with drills, workbooks and maths games.

Wow I had never even heard of Kumon before…time for me to do some learning!

Whoever made thisit is an extremely effective way of learning. i’m now an A* Student and am exceling. ur prob just jealous.

Not jealous; just offering alternatives to those who don’t want to or don’t have the means to sign up their children to Kumon (my own kids have benefitted from Kumon in the past).

kumon is awesome. i turn out to be a math genius. sometimes i show off my math skills in front of the ordinary students. it makes me feel good.

i hate kumon probably because of corrections

I know the corrections can seem to be a pain, but actually doing corrections will help you learn from your mistakes. Ask your Kumon instructor if it’s OK if you only do 1 or 2 corrections per page, just enough so you can see what mistakes you’ve made!

I had my kids in Kumon Program, but I was very disappointed about their method, 1. they use repetition and repetition until one day you get it, I belive the kids should use analytical-synthetic method, they need to analize the problem use their brain to get the answer…, I did not wanted my kids to be good robots but I want them to be briliant kids useing their brain and be really good at figuring out things. I saw with Kumon they will never be those kids, yes they will probably will improve their math marks but my goal is for life not just to have good marks now. 2. Kumon provide students to help their students, and belive me they are not University Students but high school or Elementary School students, I did not want to pay a student, a few years older then my kids, to help my kids. I expected from them to have professional instructors, so I thought anyway I’m staying there an hour to wait for my kids so I figure out if I spend that hour at home teaching my kids math, I could do a better job then those high scool students. 3. The place was so dirty it seems to me they never care to vacuum or dusting that place, in winter the floor was so wet with snow and the asked the kids to take off their boots and walk in socks on a wet and very dirty floor, my kids had to change their socks right after they finished, the place was unbelievable dirty.

yes, I agree with Sandy’s comment, the place is very very dirty and I also realize they don’t care about us their clients they just wants our money, imagine going to you Dr and the place is very dirty or anywhere else, I had a shock when I saw their low interest in their clients comfort, how can you focus, concentrate in a place like that? and also I found the only mature person a lady by the name Katrina , very disrespectful, not friendly at all, very arrogant, when I presented my issue to her she didn’t even bother to get a solution, the way she spoke with me and treated me it shocked, so that day I took my daughter out from this program, true I lost my registration fee and that month but I was happy just to walk out from that place and from that uneducated woman. I strongly recommend OXFORD to you guys, your kids will get professional help, their instructors have university degree and if they hire students to help the kids their students are University student not Elementary student like Kumon has. I saw the difference between Kumon and Oxford from first day when I walk into this Oxford Center, I’m so happy I stopped Kumon and my daughter started Oxford.

i am in kumon it is sort of fun but you get prizes like xbox 360 which i already have i pod touch which i already have ipod nano and shuffle which i already have laptops which i already have sleeping bag which i already have tv which i already have Nintendo Wii which i already have

^the prizes you are talking about are true, but my kumon center doesn’t keep up with adding points. During my first 6 months of kumon, I got a total of about 40 points. after a year and a half, I had 60.

How fortunate for you. Too bad kumon doesn’t teach humility.

Just came across this forum and wanted to say Kumon has been a great asset to both my daughters. My oldest daughter has been going for 5 years, my youngest 4 years; both take reading and math. Yes, we have had our struggles and still do from time to time – but they view it as part of their required work load (like school work) and know that it is their responsibility. Both girls do extremely well in school; especially in math. Learning the Kumon method, plus the school math method (they actually learn math in French and in English – so they learn 3 different methods total), seems to have enhanced their problem solving skills. My oldest daughter’s teacher asked if we have considered testing her to see if she’s gifted because he is blown away by her advanced reasoning skills. (This is a girl that struggled with concepts early on and is in no way ‘gifted’. However, she has a great work ethic and studies hard.) Believe me, I hate paying for it, hate correcting the daily work and pushing my kids on the days they don’t feel like doing it; but it does work.

hi, i am thinking about signing up my kid at kumon. if i had money to spare, i would sign my child up right away. my only concern is to save money. after going to orientation and seeing that they admit that they practice teaching with repetition, i would agree kumon or a type of kumon training at home would work for anybody for them to excel in math upto college and then beyond.

looking back at my experience, as a child i was given supplemental tutoring in math throughout elementary school and i always thought this helped me in my later years. as a kid, i used to hate it. i was working on math on the weekends and during the week on top of regular school work. i even was being taught algebra in 3rd grade. area calculations in 4th, 5th grade. this at the time seemed not useful and hard and seemed so boring due to the bunch of repetitions (although by the time you hit algrebra, you are not just memorizing, you have to understand what it is being done in algebra and it is very good to recognize patterns in equations as fast as you can). speed is especially important in SATs.

this repetition basically makes you do simple addition, multiplication in your head so when you get to harder stuff like algebra, you are not spending excessive time on it. Repetition does not make one a dumb smart.. It helps a person to connect things faster. Anyway. The point is, none of this supplemental extra learning seemed like it was useful because upto college, I never even thought I understood what math was or why algebra even existed (seems like computers can do these calculations much faster)….. Even though it sucked, in college, it all made sense. Not only could i whiz through simple classes, I ended up double majoring in math and computers. And no computer can only do fast calculations, given the calculation to work on. And computers break if you give them a wrong calculation to work (for example, if the instruction had a loop in it)

Today as a computer scientist or when I work with mathematicians that come up with financial analysis computations (based on old calculations they have come to recognize through practice) I realize even more how important these skills are. I wish I was given more repetition, more subjects to excel in. I wish I was also given more reading supplementals.

I think whether you pay for Kumon or do a strict version of it at home (if you can be firm/consistent on it) either way your child will benefit from it and will not regret it. Of course you gotta let the kids be kids as well. I know I don’t regret it and wish I had more.

Hi, I just started my 4 year old daughter in Kumon in Medford Massachusetts. I think it is pretty cool so far but they don’t spend a lot of time with teaching or even with my child. I find it very secretive what the young teachers are actually going over with my child. Now you explained they are re-doing the worksheets. Parents are not allowed to enter the room after a certain point.

The owner of this Kumon is Chinese/Vietnamese and has a Masters in Education from Tufts University. I send my child for both (math & reading) and the first month was expensive for 4 hours per month (30 mins on Monday & Thursday afternoons) . I could make up those worksheets too. I’ll give it more time but I really can’t afford it long term. I wanted to my daughter to be comfortable with math unlike her mom !

It is just a testament of the public school system in this country and how we are producing more foolish kids than bright ones in other countries. I don’t blame the teachers as much as the parents. Our basic curriculum is not up to standards compared to other countries. And we focus our students on sports way too much. Just my two cents. Thank you for writing about Kumon.

Hi Rosey, Thanks for sharing your thoughts about Kumon. As a system, it can definitely work, and in comparison to long term private tuition, the price is reasonable. However as you say, it’s also something that can be replicated at home. It’s interesting that you say that Kumon is popular in the West due to the poor education system. I agree, however Kumon is even more popular in Asian countries with more traditional math education systems. It seems that parents all around the world realise the importance of their children being strong at math and English.

hate it, stuck there without my consent, work is irrelevant and has done nothing. The fact that i go there about once in three months has made no difference in my performance as when I went regularly. All for one hundred bloody dollars a month. The only reason I’m sticking with it, is out of financial obligation. If I wasn’t unemployed, I’d just pay back my parents and drop out.

Maybe if u went twice a wk instead of once every 3 months,u would notice some improvements. And with that attitude,no wonder you are not getting it. Your parents are trying to give you a good future,It’s for your own good not there’s.

^Their’s. Mabye YOU should try kumon. You will soon have the same viewpoint as that anonymous fellow.

With your attitude, you might just take it and see how you like it.

Many different math learning centrse have different purposes so if your children just solely want to work on math computation and do not need instruction or teaching then Kumon is fine especially Kumon system is very efficient in running franchise, much like fast food approach.

But if you want to have you kids not only learn computation skills but also problem solvinig skills then it requires quality taching time, this is where Kuon lacks but if they get iinto this area then their franchise efficient system will suffer. So here is the tradeoff from running an education franchise system of view.

I believe a well-rounded math education system so my learning centre Ho Math and Chess teaches not only computation but also problem solving skills using chess and puzzles.

Details see http://www.mathandchess.com

The way of learning maths which they (Kumon authorities) claim to be “highly effective because it is time tested and over 50 years old that follows the Japanese style of learning” is not based on evidence according to the US Department of Education ( http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/reports/elementary_math/kumon/index.asp ). Kumon maths is for children who are just starting to learn arithmetic or for those who find maths very difficult and are failing in class. It is not for math savvy children in higher grades. Children are given a timed test to ‘check their level’ and placed at a certain level of practice. Most children inevitably start with basic arithmetic like ‘8+1=’. Try doing 150 problems in 10-15 minutes! Most of us would make at least 1 mistake. The child has to have 100% correct answers. After months and books and books of this they graduate to the next level which is ‘8-0=’! If basic arithmetic is given for the first day, it would be OK, provided there were true math certified tutors at Kumon who would teach students mental maths, i.e. tricks of doing maths. Rote learning is never effective. The human brain does not remember memorized facts, it needs to understand facts. The same way children need to understand mathematics. In addition applied maths is what is important for smart older children. There is always simple addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division in any math problem. The tutors at Kumon are not experts in maths. They charge a lot of money for a few workbooks that parents have to help kids do. Mothers who believe their gifted student is getting straight A’s in class because of Kumon are completely disillusioned. It is because your child is smart and knows maths that he/she is doing so well: give your child some credit! Compare what your child does in class and what he/she does at Kumon- you will find a big discrepancy. Your child can probably teach the tutor how to do algebra and calculus! Kumon can actually hurt a child who is good in maths. If a child who is getting straight A’s in school is forced to do problems like ‘8-0=’ and led to believe that she /he needs to do over 500 such problems because that is what her/his understanding and level of math is, he/she will be completely stripped of confidence. Where is the challenge that smart kids need? If you want your child to practice at home then search on the web; you will find worksheets for a subscription of $10 a month. You can have them practice any number of problems that will be corrected and graded automatically. Therefore, understand your child and her/his needs before going to Kumon. Do not enroll your child to satisfy yourself, instead think of what it can do for your child: help or harm!

THE MAIN REASON KIDS [I] HATE KUMON: takes up time of their days. they feel its a waste of time and would rather do something else. extra homework everyday is harder than you think, because the child may feel it isn’t needed.

kumon helps your results enormously. it gets you above the standard for your year level, and also makes you quicker from all the repetition, however saying that, I actually hate kumon because of the stupid homework books. they are a waste of time, and if you are a high school student it is just another thing you have to do on top of all your other homework. i always have lots of other things to do, and the homework is just such a boring waste of time. i would love kumon if there was no homework. period.

I love kumon and I am a twelve yr old that is very busy and barley has time. I made it into algebra because of kumon. I am ahead and the work I do is soooo easy. I would really recommend it at age ten cause that’s when it starts to benefit. My instructor is the smartest lady I know. I need help she explains it in a way which makes you think. I love kumon a lot. I thank my parents for enrolling me . And when I was told to quit an extra curricular activity I chose my favorite sport track over kumon. It will get ur kid in an iv league collage if she he really devotes time. This message came from a kid btw:)

First off, your #7, and #8 are not even things to “hate” about Kumon. Even in your review, they are things to actually “like” about Kumon. Second, Kumon is NOT a tutoring program and its not supposed to be and it is not promoted as such. The repetition is designed to train the kids to learn on their own.

My son is 7 3/4 years old and has been going to Kumon for a little over than a year, he started in the summer after completing 1st grade. We began with math and added reading about 6 months ago. Initially he was placed at the 1st grade level, in a year zoomed through the worksheets and is now at level F (6th grade equivalent). Kumon was a lifesaver for him (and us his parents) as he started getting extremely bored with school’s math. I tried to supplement with extra work at home but he needed a good system. Kumon was able to fill that void, we later found out that some of his friends from school also go there which added some healthy competition to the success equation. My son has a competitive nature (he was very excited when he “bit everybody, even those who went there since they were babies” and went ahead of his grade-level peers) and though “rebels” against Kumon at times, still tries to do his best to complete the assigned work.

All was well up to this point. Due to such high level of work that he is currently doing and other commitments (sports, other languages, etc) it is difficult for him to do 5 sheets/day as he used to do. We cut down to 3-4 sheets/day. He’d probably be even better off doing less than that to free up more time for other things that he enjoys doing during the day but this is where the problem is.

I caught myself giving Kumon first priority among things that need to be done after-school even if I think something else would probably be more beneficial for my child because of (a parent confession follows…) a pressure of a monthly bill! I can’t help it, I realized that I have this thought sitting there in the back of my mind! Especially after finding out that our Kumon center charges about 25-40% more than what they typically charge in other areas, my math is good enough to figure out how much our family “looses” each day when work is not being done completely or when a week goes by and he only did what he normally does in a day or two.

I think that what my son is doing on level F is beneficial for him in a “non-mathematical” sense: it stretches his brain, helps with attention, focus, concentration and makes him a better student overall. But going an inch in a quarter for the same monthly fee seems to be psychologically hard to handle. It really makes me question the true value of the math work itself that he’s doing. At this point Kumon helped him build a “skeleton”, he needs to put “meat” on it in a form of more word problems, reasoning exercises, etc. We would have liked to continue with Kumon but the way things are right now, it forms bad parenting habits (as well as makes my son’s work sloppier than ever before as he rushes through it just to be done sooner). I hate that this “use-it-or-loose-it” approach dictates my parenting choices.

Any advice please?

Hi! That’s so cool that your son has moved so far with the Kumon program. Say “Well Done” to him from me! I can totally sympathize with you about having a young child on the higher Kumon levels. My own son was getting frustrated with the early part of Level H when I stopped his Kumon. He was 9 years old at the time.

The problem isn’t just the repetition, it’s the fact that Kumon kind of “over trains” the child, that is, it gives children questions that are way harder than what would be expected in a normal textbook. What’s good about that is that it means that when kids meet a standard maths question, they find it easy, but what it also means is that they also feel that they’re not good at that particular topic because they struggle with the advanced questions. Level D and F and H are particularly bad for that.

My advice. Algebra comes in at the end of Level G, and it’s nice if he can get some algebra under his belt, and Level G is relatively easy compared to Level F. Perhaps promise him he can stop at the end of Level G. You may find he’ll actually want to continue! I wouldn’t bother cutting down to less than 3 pages – it’ll just make the whole thing drag on. If it’s just not working though, then stop. You can then focus on the word problems etc. My son goes green at the sight of a geometry question – Kumon helped him be a “Maths Whizz” but gave him a false sense of his maths ability – yes he’ll still come top in maths tests for a long time to come but there are still plenty of maths skills that he needs to develop.

Take a look at some of the resources in this post 6 Super Resources for Your Bored Maths Genius There’s some nice variety there which will be useful whether you stop Kumon or not.

Hope this helps!

Hello, I know this is a bit late, but I just came across this web page today. I have to admit, I feel like you, as I have 3 children enrolled right now. All of them have reduced workloads. I rqstd a reduction in one child’s workload due to his rigorous college prep school homework load. However, they reduced all of their work. I have one child in level h, one in level f, and one in level a. I always rqst a full workload in the summer, however, for my 4yr old, I won’t be doing that this summer. I do feel like I’m bleeding money on occasion as I have them enrolled in another math program which focuses on word problems and problem-solving. An additional $100 or so per class! I do feel that they both have their benefits, and your child will experience a sort of, roller coaster effect with his/her homework “intestinal fortitude”, but taking the long-term goals into consideration, it’s always worth it to apply stick-with-it-ness to any endeavor. I hope this helps you, or at least make you feel less alone.

I think you would love the Continental Mathematics League workbooks- very complicated word problems, have to graph etc- its what kumon does not teach. Do a search on google. You will be surprised, he will be challenged! Honestly if your son is doing level F at such a young age, just stop. When he is older look for the SIG gifted camps in math for summer. Kumon is good to nail all the basic functions, but now he may be limited in using his creativity to solve problems his way. He has all the tools.

I have 2 sons in Kumon for about 4 years now. Below are some of the pro’s and con’s that I see with Kumon:

* My son is a whiz at arithmetic now and that’s what gets you ahead. Unfortunately kids in western countries always need to reach out for their calculator to do simple math

* Reading comprehension is vital for communication and understanding. The reading questions help build this and also helps them learn new vocabulary. Paragraphs are small and they may be a couple questions about it which helps test the child’s understanding.

* stickers and points are rewarded which gives them a choice of items to “purchase”. A big deal for kids.

* The steps used to master math and reading is gradual and repetitive which helps them build on their learned skills ex. in math kids start off with adding small numbers, then larger numbers, then subtracting small numbers, then large numbers, then vertical addition and subtraction, then multiplication,division, fractions……

* The Kumon centre my kids go to is organized which makes things run smoother

* My kids get 20 minutes worth of school work during the week which leaves the entire evening to do nothing and instead of leaving them to television, games or fighting each other, I find Kumon is more productive.

* can be expensive if you’ve got more than 1 child and they are in math and reading.

* There is no interaction with the children and the work. By this I mean, when a child is struggling with something, to my knowledge, the staff is not required to help the child understand their work by going through the problem with them to help them understand which then creates repeat mistakes. This same problem occurs when the child does work at home and finds that he/she didn’t understand a concept and repeated the mistakes in multiple worksheets which in turn forces them to repeat all of the worksheets. To avoid this, as a parent, I am forced to mark my childs work regularly so that I know he/she understands the concept instead of repeating the same mistakes.

* Due to the above, I put alot of time and dedication in marking and explaining/helping them understand their mistakes because as much as they hate Kumon, I’m not a fan of it either but I think it’s important they get these basic skills. I also do this to help them excel faster.

* children will rush through work just to get it out of the way without regards to the quality of their work.

* getting them to do it! After struggling for 2 years, they know the drill and don’t fuss as much

* everyday is Kumon day no matter what, even on the weekends, even though its not a must but if you don’t then it’ll just take longer to get through Kumon.

Hope this helps some of you parent(s).

I think a lot of people believe that Kumon should help raise their childs marks in school. Make no mistake, Kumon is not necessarily for kids who are struggling but those who want their child(ren) to master arithmetic and reading comprehension skills.

i still hate kumon. A LOT! alothough it has helped me improve on maths, it’s also been getting in my way many, many times with homework. with the amount of homework i’m getting and adding kumon homework, i sometimes think i can’t get it all done and i really want to get high marks from school! and so i don’t really finish my kumon homework, resulting to a waste of a whole lot of trees.

I HATE KUMON! XP

Enjoyed reading your blog. I’m doing some research on the “big guys” in the world of tutoring – appreciated the perspective from an insider. If you have a minute please check out the latest post on our blog (I think you might enjoy it).

http://www.nextleveltutoring.net

Good luck and hope to hear from you!

I went to kumon for 8 months and I feel it quietly good…The problem is that by the time I get there I was entering to University so the instructors at Kumon told me that i needed to began by level A, and I felt very dissapointed because i was 18 Yrs and to learn things like 5+5 it very distress for my age and boring but I had hope that in 2 months I reach the level L but the reality but me far away. The Kumon instructors never wanted me to get more math sheets and even if I learn to solve the problems 100% by using their method, they asked me to repeat it 5 times more and that 5x more means you spending 2 weeks more for just and operation..So when I reach the 8 months I ended on level H but all the math that i learn was useless for my age and for the carrer I began to study. And that’s the reason I quit so in short words (KUMON is just for little kids and not for adult people)

Kumon has helped me but teaching is weird and gives me headaches my brother stoped doing kumon but i still do it it is terrible i hate it so much.

Sometimes I am puzzled whether I need to keep my kids in Kumon. They have been doing Kumon for a year. I think my son improved some in his reading, but for math, it is like what others are saying that it did not teach problem solving skills. My kids hate Kumon as well. I am afraid the longer I keep them in Kumon, the more they will hate study, which would be the worst outcome of doing Kumon, plus it is expensive.

You’ll likely see a more visible improvement in math skills on the Kumon program after the 18 month mark. The first year or so fills any gaps in their knowledge and lays the foundation for the higher level work. Have you looked at any of the online math programs like Math-Whizz ? They may not produce kids who are as super-fast as arithmeticians, but are great for building overall math skills including problem solving. My latest post highlights why my son loves Math-Whizz . Hope this helps!

i want to be good in math.. but every time our professor discussed, i doesn’t able to catch-up that’s why i always got bad grades, low scores… how should i catch-up our lessons in an easy way? to get good grades?…can somebody help me?

Kumon is VERY effective, it has helped my child’s speed in class, confidence and her work skills, she was unable to do simple maths skills at 13 even though she has been to private schools throughout her life. She can do advanced maths very well but has never been taught basic arithmetic.

Kumon is simply horrible. I’m learning grade 12 language arts and grade 11 math. What’s the point in learning it if you’re going to forget it when you get to high school. Honestly, I’ve went to Kumon ever since I was in grade 3 and it’s stupid. Especially the instructor’s daughter. She’s a bitch when she sees me. I ditch often but you can’t blame me. It’s a waste of my time and i want to live a fun carefree childhood but that’s ruined. Now I’m in my teen years and I still am stuck wih kumon. But i had asked my parents if I could quit at the end of 8th grade and they said maybe.

Kumon is an awful learning center. How would doing a large amount of homework that is, in most cases, completely unrelated to school lessons, help the student? It would only overwhelm him/her and foster a hatred towards learning. Yes, it’s true they want the kids to teach themselves, but that may be a little rocky. Strong early education is essential to being able to teach yourself in the future, so in elementary and middle school, you do want someone to “hold your hand” in teaching. You need a strong foundation to build off of for the future. Kumon does not provide that. And in later middle school and high school years, regular schools provide so much homework that any additional work will be extremely stressful for the child.

THIS WAS MY EXPERIENCE: I MADE A REGISTRATION FOR MY 6 YEARS OLD SON ON MONDAY (5/7/2012 @ 79-43 Metropolitan Ave, Middle Village, NY 11379) AND I WAS GOING TO PAY THE OTHER FEE AND ONE MOTHN PAYMENT ON FRIDAY (5/11/12) WHICH WAS THE DAY A PICKED TO MY SON TO START THE PROGRAM. SO, FROM MONDAY TO FRIDAY I SPREAD THE WORD TO ALL MY PARENTS FRIENDS ABOUT THE PROGRAM COZ I WAS VERY EXCITED FOR MY SON. AND BECAUSE OF THAT I HEARED AWFULL REVIEWS ABOUT THIS PLACE INCLUDING ONE MOTHER WHO WORKS ON DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. I DIDN’T HEAR NOT EVEN ONE GOOD REVIEW ABOUT THIS PLACE. SO I DECIDED NOT TO MOVE FORWARD WITH THE PROGRAM. I MADE A $ 50 REGISTRATION FEE ON THIS PLACE AND I WAS TOTALLY AWARE ABOUT THE NON REFUNDABLE REGISTRATION POLICY. HOWEVER, I JUST WOULD LIKE TO ADVICE FOR ANY PARENTS OUT THERE TO BE 100% SURE BEFORE ENROOL YOUR CHILD ON KUMON PROGRAM. DO YOUR RESEARCH AND ASK FRIENDS BEFORE ENROOLLING. I LEARNED THAT IS NOT WORTH IT BECAUSE WHO REALLY DOES THE “JOB” ARE THE PARENTS. BESIDES, I RATHER PAY A LITTLE BE MORE FOR A TUTOR WHO WILL BE FACE TO FACE WITH MY SON (IT MAKES MORE SENSE TO ME). ALSO, I’M TRULY BEEING HONEST WITH THIS REVIEW AND I MUST TO SAY THAT ALL THRU I DIDN’T TRY THE PROGRAM MYSELF DUE TO BAD REVIEWS AND EXPERIENCES ABOUT THE PROGRAM. IT’S WAS MY CHOICE NOT TO MOVE FORWARD.

I have 2 kids in Kumon now. My sone hates it as it repetitive and boring. However he’s also happy that he’s ahead in his class. My daughter likes it and also ahead in her class. I think its good for early ages as its sharpens arithmetic and teach kids that practice makes perfect. The activities also teachers discipline and consistency as they need to do practice daily. I have found atomicsteps.com which is a new Math practice site which allows for kids to practice online, self graded with thousands of questions. Its not boring as its filled with critical thinking and images. Try it out !

Hi, I read this dicussion with interest.

My daughters are 2yrs and 4yrs old. I bought the Lets Color, -Paste and -Cut workbooks for them. Also the Workbook of Mazes and workbook on drawings. They love it!

I see your comments all are for the more advanced and children attending the weekly classes.

I haven’t approached the KUMON Centre in my area so I dont know what any of the classes are all about.

Could you please explain step by step how it works, and what are expected of the instructors and the kids alike during any class.

Cant I buy the books as they get older and let them work through them at their own pace? Can a parent be a instructor?

Any constructive feedback will be appreciated.

Glad to hear your girls liked the Kumon books. The Kumon books are actually quite good (I’ve used some with my own preschooler) In fact I’d go as far as saying that in general the preschool Kumon materials on the actual Kumon program are also good for the first 3 or 4 levels – kids tend to like the colourful, fun nature of the worksheets at those levels. Most Kumon centres wouldn’t take children until they are 3 or 4 years old (I started the preschool materials with one of my kids at 2.5 years old but that was because as an instructor I had the materials and could do it with him at home) I think the Kumon books are a good substitute for those who can’t get hold of the materials Regarding parents being their child’s instructor: parents aren’t allowed into the work area so your child would only work with the Kumon instructor or one of the assistants. However, since worksheets are also given for the child to do at home on the remaining 6 days, in effect you are your child’s instructor on those days. You could also just go to the centre to pick up the work or get the instructor to mail the work to you then do all the work at home with your child. Hope that helps!

Thanks Caroline! I think I will continue with the workbooks at home. Once both are around 4yrs I will enroll them at the center closes to us.

Hi Caroline Its impressive that you were able to start Kumon for your kid at 2.5 years. I have twin daughters. They just turned two. Is that way too early to enroll them in Kumon. They can count to 10. Thanks Ganesh.

The instructor (who shall remain unnamed) of Hornsby and Neutral Bay Kumon Franchises in Sydney has been ripping off parents for decades. She has basically applied a ‘tiger mum’ approach with none of the effectiveness, since she doesn’t believe in ‘teaching’. This results in children as young as 4 crying EVERY lesson and students having their confidence crushed. Maths and English errors are quite vocally reprimanded so the student is publically humiliated in front of their peers. The instructor is self worshipping and thinks that any inconvenience (such as homework not being marked), is the fault of the child or her staff. Perhaps if Kumon implemented some basic educational and personality screening for their franchisers they wouldn’t have this travesty.

EVERY BODY HAVE A OPINION.I APPLYING FOR A PART TIME MATH TEACHER IN KUMON.I’M A CIVIL ENGINEER, AS A ENGINEER WE HAVE EXTENSIVE STUDY IN ADVANCE MATH.I STILL LOVE KUMON.

I’ve been going to Kumon for two years now and I really like it. Sure they give you lots of lessons to take home, but how else are you going to hone your mathematical skills? I don’t mind the extra home work since I’m an indoors kind of guy. I’m very well disciplined in my scholastic home studies and music lessons (classical guitar, bass and piano).

After high school I plan to pursue my future studies in either psychology or accounting. Yeah, two subjects that are world’s apart but they both pique my interests especially psychology.

When my Mom and Dad first brought me to Kumon I noticed the sign on the building of the Kumon center with the serious looking kid’s face in the letter O. That is so cool looking!

Really don’t understand the people who moan, Kumon is a great system , my child at 8 rears old was bottom of his class in matghs and English, after one year at Kumon he is now top of his class in Maths and has made great improvements in his English. No he didnt like doing it, it used to take him nearly an hour a day to do the work and yes we had some tantrums ,but now it takes him no more that 20 minutes a day and usually just ten minutes its not hard its easy and he is very pleased with his own efforts, and I am very proud of him also.

If you have an iPad check out http://www.Tabtor.com its Khan Academy on Steriods. Its a personal math tutor for your child on the iPad. The child gets a diagnostic test at the beginning and the tutor then personalizes the work activity based on results. There is a 14 day free trial period with no credit card or commitment necessary. There is no catch. Think of this as the netflix of the tutoring world, you get superior service from the comfort of your home. A tutor contacts you on a daily basis regarding your child’s performance through email and one 15 minute conference call per week.

Here is a video of my son using the program, see for yourself. Please contact me if you have any questions.

http://youtu.be/gPP4LpdtJSI

Just like to add that my daughter has been going for two months and I believe we are starting to see a difference. It’s the beginning of the 3rd marking period and her grades are picking up and she just received her 1st “A” in math, spelling and reading last week. We are so excited! I hope this is the turning point. The Kumon program does focus on repetition but I think that it is working for her. Her time is getting faster with the worksheets, from 40 min per sheet to 8 min. Her confidence is building too. I believe her confidence, or lack there of, in the class room and with homework is a big part of the problem we were having. So 2 months in and we are seeing lot’s of improvement. Our goal is to get her caught up and prepare her for 3rd grade next year!

I recommiend you try Tabtor, its much better and more personlaized than Kumon. why leave your house when you can do it from the comfort of your own home. All worksheets are personalized to your son/daughters strengths and weaknesses. You get a weekly conference call with the tutor in addition to weekly reports.

There is a 14 day free trial with no credit card necessary and there is no obligation whatsoever. You will save over $900 a year by switching to Tabtor. check us out at http://www.tabtor.com . You do the math!

If you have questions, please email me at [email protected]

I’m 13 and I go to Kumon. I think it’s very helpful. Kumon made math so much easier for me. (I’m really bored in Algebra class in school). Even though it is stressful at times when they give super hard problems, and I ending staying at the center for about 2-3 hours, I think it’s worth it. I started Kumon in 2007, but then I had to quit. I started it again in 2010, now it’s 2013, and I’m on Level J.

been to kumon centre in putney, london.its horrible.lady running the centre is very rude, staff is not at all qaulified to handle kids..its just money making.worksheets can be taken from net rather paying to kumon for 10 mins with cheap unqualified school kids teaching for easy money.

Its kind of ironic that all the students that have posted that they think Kumon is helping them, have not been able to spell or type correctly. They are using phone slang shortcuts, which, if you wish to get anywhere in life, is a bad habit not to encourage. No employer will take you on if you write like that. If I were Kumon, I’d be ashamed of the public examples of my teaching skills. Isn’t English one of the topics?

I strongly urge everyone to at least Tabtor. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain. We just won the Shiksha Ratan award in India from the Department of Education as the Best MAth LAb solution in the country. Private schools across the U.S. are excited after presenting at the NAIS convention in Philly last week.

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There is a Free Trial for 14 days with no credit card necessary absoultely no risk. If you use mathinsider1 in the referral code, you will save $10 a month. There is a physical tutor behind every child that personalizes his or her work flow to their strengths and weaknesses. We are the only service out there that can provide this service and we are able to do so through technology.

To start use the link here: https://www.tabtor.com/app/freetrial.php?code=mathinsider1

http://youtu.be/l8Gb2TtQFs8

My kids have been in kumon since they were 3. Guess its about 6 years now. Initially it was math and reading. I ditched the reading last year- it did not improve reading comp, as my son pretty much just memorized the answers on each packet. I have read all the comments here, must say that those parents who say their child is 5 doing level H work is pretty hard to swallow. The child has to do repeats of work sheets, and its days. A kid would have to do 30 sheets a day to pull that off, by kumon standards.- Unless the kumon instructor is doing her/his own thing. I love the math kumon- I wanted my kids to be able to master all 4 functions- add/subtract/multiply and divide, now fractions. I must say this, when kids are younger kumon is living hell. Its hard for them to just do it and hours will pass. Eventually though the child learns self control and whammo its 20 minutes. My kids have concentration, which I really attribute to them doing work everyday. I will say I am not a kumon nazi. Since they are both 2 yrs ahead in math, they do 3 pages a day and one day a week no kumon. This keeps them sane. My son is in 3rd grade and daughter in 2nd grade, private school. The school is all about games for math- yet the students are hardly proficient. There is no way the kids in the class could answer more challenging problems. My son – his class has not mastered the times table and division is a joke. If I had not done kumon for them I would be really concerned that they really can’t do math. The issue is schools really suck at math. If my kids can learn adding/subtracting really hard problems and master times table at the end of first grade then why oh why are schools unable to do this with a child at the end of 3rd grade? Our math skills as a nation are dismal, I can see very clearly as to why now. In China, all the kids learn how to multiply at the end of 1st grade, here- maybe they get it in 4th. Its this everyday math, combining addition/ subtraction and wanting clever solutions to complicated word problems. In my opinion, the kids just have to do the math, it is not about loving it all the the time, but character is built. It takes my son 5 minutes to do his math homework, at school mind you. He does not have math class everyday, only 2 times a week, math homework is rare. Pitiful really. The money I spend at kumon is well spent. The teachers hate, hate kumon- but if every kid in the class did kumon they would be forced to come up with a more challenging math program- ta da! If schools believe they are doing such a great job how about giving the kids here- 3rd graders a shanghai 1st grade math test? It would be hard to look at that and do nothing. Its my job to get my kids up to global standards , I can’t get these years back. But!!! If you do kumon give the kids a break every now and then. I will walk into kumon after 1.5 hours and pull them out- they sit and wait forever for corrections, I say “sick” and walk them out. Time is time, can’t be a maniac about it.

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My daughter is with kumon for 3rd year and we found that the its almost rip of your money and time and the instructors are worst ever don’t update the progress and do lot cheap tricks to get money and milking you so that your kids study there long time They give few papers or give the same papers again and again and don’t listen to the kids or even parents and adamant There are so many sites now and you can learn a lot if your kids spent at-least half an hour rather than you do this as its useless in kids education and not helps to pass any exams at all

I’m a marker at kumon. In my opinion, kumon is a waste of money. It’s expensive. Moreover, they didn’t teach or solve problems. A lot of students do not understand when they reach new level and just keep making mistakes. There are no teacher guiding. Moreover, the instructor and staff are not professional in maths. So, if you want your kids to have good foundation in maths or truly understand the concepts of maths, I’d not suggest kumon.

Kumon is for those who want there son or daughter to always be busy. It makes student over confident and ultimately they end up doing bad in Higher grades and universities. I have first experience about this. It is just a business, people get tricked.

It’s not Kumon’s fault they’re over confident. They should be more careful.

I am a Kumon student since, 2011 and I am now on level I as well as sixth grade I only do math and while I find it sometimes diffifult I do it, here is what I think;

Pros ~ Kumon really drills it in and every packet builds upon the last We learn not to always rely on your teachers but to figure it out yourself

Cons ~ Expensive Teachers are mean Not a friendly, happy envioment Too much work really, I found that My HARD Kumon with Simple but a lot of School work really cut my time I am a straight up A+ student and Kumon really takes time and effort from school

Kumon = Scam

You pay stupid unqualified tutors $150 every month just to torture your child and repeat the same worksheets till you are in a financial hole.

Tabtor is $60, it’s done on tablets, you earn money doing math, you can do it anywhere, and all teachers are certified teachers. It’s like going from a regular cell phone to a smart phone. Does anyone ever go back to the regular cell phone. If you are contemplating Kumon, I think you owe it to yourself to check out Tabtor.

Kumon is seriously dangerous to children as it lacks creativity and critical thinking. Children studying Kumon tend to level off and decline cognitively because their developmental years are seriously damaged by introduction of rote learning such as Kumon. If are a parent and want your child to be brilliant, quit Kumon and enroll them in a creative and stimulating environment. You will be happy you did.

A great example can be seen from Barbara Walters’s ABC-TV Special “The 10 Most Fascinating People Of 2004” on Larry Page and Sergey Brin, founders of the popular Internet search engine Google.com, whocredited their years as Montessori students as a major factor in behind their success. Having been friends since childhood. When Barbara Walters asked if the fact that their parents were college professors was a factor behind their success, they said no, that it was their going to Montessori school where they learned to be self-directed and self-starters. They said that Montessori allowed them to learn to think for themselves and gave them freedom to pursue their own interests.

I have been doing kumon since the second grade and so when i show this to her, I hope she finds no positives whatsoever so that I can finally get out of it!!! And I am in 7th grade now :__( Thank you for posting this because now i have more evidence to get out of the ugly world of Kumon

I am the daughter of a Kumon instructor, and I can say that Kumon has changed. I started when I was 3 and I finished the reading program in 4th grade. We DO NOT print off our own worksheets, the Kumon headquarters supply them to us. Kumon trains students to be fast and accurate, therefore word problems should not be a problem. It never was for me.

The writer says that the parent his/her self can teach their child. Not completely nonsense, but there are certain flaws. I will give you an example: Our center once had a student whose mother bragged about his intelligence. “He’s the top in his class,” she said. “He’s never gotten a ‘B’ in his life, and I taught him.” Yes, the mother! We tested him, only to find out he was incredibly slow, and steps were all over the page. He was using a different method of two-digit multiplication, a lattice method, that took too long to draw and compute. His basic addition and subtraction skills were fine, but he was too slow and sloppy. So yes, feel free to teach your child, but if you are not a, I quote, “qualified maths teacher,” maybe you should leave it to the Kumon instructor.

Also the writer seems to be saying ALL Kumon instructors do not teach the students. Of course they don’t, Kumon is intended to be self-learning. If a student needs help comprehending, my mom always spent MUCH more than 10 minutes helping them understand. When I was doing Level L in Math, I always studied the solution book first, then went to complete the set, and if I still did not get something, I asked my mom.

Furthermore, the writer appears to be very opinionated. Kumon is repetitive, yes that is a fact. Kumon is boring? Opinion right there. I would expect the readers to conjure their own opinions, while the writer should only supply the eight ABSOLUTE HORRIBLE things about Kumon solely. Nothing else!

I understand that the writer used to run a Kumon Center, and often times, it is a very stressful job. However, I believe in it, and I was disappointed in this article. By the way, I’m going into 8th grade.

I am interested in Cmaths, can anyone tell me if it is good or not? My kids can not do the same thing over and over- kumon bored them

Kumon may not be the most effective method for children to gain more practical skills with learning math and reading. Although you are given the core skills of being able to do arithmetic quickly but it still takes other skills (like comprehension skill set) to really get children to be able to complete questions when taking tests. I would recommend trying out a website called Beestar which provided my daughter with helpful worksheets that makes her think for her own! She is highly entertained with the different types of worksheets.

One word Tabtor. It’s the best alternative on the market. Check it out at Tabtor.com. It’s like having a tutor in your pocket.

Kumon is not effective for children to grasp practical math and reading skills. Core skills are strengthened in a timely manner but seems to lack critical thinking skills. I would recommend trying out a website called Beestar which provided my daughter with helpful worksheets that helps her think critically. She is fairly interested with the different types of worksheet that is provided by the website.

Well, I haven’t been having any oppositions and arguments about your statements, but Kumon is not that boring; you see it’s fun if you will think that “It’s fun and not totally boring!” I know that it may be hard to continue it ’til the end, but it is for your own future’s sake. What they promote is focus and accuracy, and because of these technique you can do your tasks in a fast and sure way, minimizing the consumed time to do the task. Also, the performance depends on you. It’s your choice whether you enroll or not or just “at the neutrality of the game.” You have the privilege to decide. That’s all I want to say. :)

I’m 6 pages from finishing level O in math. I’ve been in Kumon for ~9 years, and I started at level 2A. Throughout my time at Kumon, I’ve seen people drop out and regret doing so (including my sister). I took Hnrs. Geometry in 9th grade, completed Alg 2 Hnrs online over a summer, took Hnrs. Precalc in 10th, took AP Calc AB 11th grade (got a 5 with ease), took Calc 2 the first semester of my senior year, and am currently taking Calc 3 alongside college students (and I can solve difficult problems meant for groups by myself). I’m planning to major in engineering once I graduate from high school. Trust me: Kumon is a valuable resource

I am in Japan,the origin of kumon,and I hate it.Really,my parents force me to do it.At school,a international school,Everyone hates it.No one like it,exept the kumon instructors!They don’t think!Even,1+1 questions,they see the answer note book to check!All they do is say”Good Job,you did well”and get money.They even make us pay electric fee 20 dollars!I should cost only 30 dollars,divided by the amount of students!

I think you should talk to your parents about this, because if you don’t have the drive to do something, then you have nothing. The will to work is the most important piece.

I definitely do not recommend for anybody to send their child to kumon. It is a complete waste of time and money. Kumon may seem useful is primary grades but once kids have to start thinking and applying their knowledge, kumon will be of no use. kumon simply enforces the use of mental math which the strudents will eventually forget once they get to higher grades and are required to use a calculator. I have worked at a kumon center and honestly, I hated working there. The instructors are reluctant to explain anything even when it is painfully obvious that the student has no clue what he/she us doing. Several times, students have approached me for help because they kept getting the same questions wrong. I tried to explain to them how to solve the questions but my boss (owner of franchise) told me to let them figured it out on their own. I don’t understand how they were even supposed to do these questions without being introduced to the material first. Plus, if I wanted my kid to do billions of worksheets I would print them online.

It is true that often times graders and instructors don’t want to teach you, but that just makes me more independent. It irritates me too sometimes when the graders are completely clueless on a subject, but I hardly ever ask for help anyways. The student should be able to learn on their own, by slowly analyzing an example from Kumon and determining what goes where and why it goes there. The examples easily tell me everything.

i actually think that kumon is helpful, my child did not know how to speak or write in english because we are originally from a different country and my child has improved so much that at her school they gave her an english award for being first in her class and same with my other son but he got a maths award and all thanks to KUMON!

I know an eight grader and a tenth grader who are now doing university level math because of kumon. Kumon is definitely helpful. My parents regret not sending my sister to kumon.

The problem with this analysis is that it assumes Kumon replaces school. Taking Kumon does not mean that your child should quit school. Kumon works to fill in the gaps of what is hard to teach in school.

Most kids falling behind in school are falling behind because they are not yet fluent enough in the basics. A third grader cannot possibly learn about how much change to give if they still have to think hard about basic arithmetic. That would be ridiculously overwhelming. But teachers with 30+ students in their class struggle to give everyone the large amount of one-on-one time required to solidify these basics, especially when not every student is struggling with them. Kumon helps to make the math easy so that in school, the student can focus their attention on the new concepts being taught.

As a teacher, I love the Kumon system.

Kumon is the best among the rest.

I love kumon….

Kumon is very expensive,take example of the good school in Africa Ndameze English Medium School in East africa with good education but the fee is very cheap.

kumon sucks so musch i just got signed up.

Here is an idea, author: Don’t send your kid(s) to Kumon then! I can tell you that Kumon has worked wonders for our 5 year old. We started sending him at age 4, so total of about 15 months. He learned FAR more at Kumon as far as basic reading and math skills than his ultra expensive pre school. In fact, Kumon gave him such a strong start that his first few days at Kindergarten have me wondering if he is going to get bored.

Your mileage may vary, and I’m sure there is variation between each franchise. Older kids might not get same value that we did, etc. I can tell you for my son and for his friends who also attended, it ROCKED!

I think Kumon helped my child a lot with reading she was a grade level ahead of the other children in her class so thumbs up to Kumon

Kumon is not at all that horrible. It does take a long time and the instructors don’t tell you how to do anything but that increases your independence. I did Kumon myself and it is the only reason I achieved high marks in school and had all advanced classes. Of course you have to actually stay in Kumon for a long time to actually see results. Staying for one or two days may make you think it is horrible but a couple years in the program makes you appreciate it.

I Hate Kumon! Im a student there and if your interested in joining your kids in kumon, DONT! I begged my mom for 3years to quit kumon and the day finally came. Yesterday my mom told me I can quit! I was so happy that I started to cry! Kumon just wants your money they don’t care if you get it or not. It takes about 1-2 hours to do my homework from kumon that I don’t even get and I have to do that every single day. Every time I try to ask for help at the Kumon center they don’t know how to do it so they said I can just guess. 1st of all the people that work there are in high school and don’t know what there doing. 2nd the people that work there are super mean. 3rd they repeat you for 2 months on 2nd grade math and don’t put you at the grade level you are. Finally, its way too much stress because you have school work to do Plus extra work to do from Kumon it just kills your kids. oh and the parents get stressed too because you have to check there hw everyday and if u miss a day it just becomes a mess. My mom thinks its a good idea to be in kumon but NOPE for the kids its like hell. Please don’t put your kids in Kumon.

Same-ish ever since I started I kept on asking my mom and dad if I could quit. Plus it wastes your time. I have a lot of homework and Kumon just makes me work late

Honestly, the only way to forge steel, is to temper it with fire. You want to be successful in life, you gotta go through hell first, but Kumon isn’t even hell. It really helped me become a better, smarter person. I really appreciate Kumon’s help.

I’m a 12 year old.

I have A’s in advanced English & Math.

I finished the English program last year, and I’m on Level L in Math.

I can say, kumon HAS helped me. A lot.

Even though I’d not want to admit it, doing worksheets every single day when everyone else had free time has reduced my homework time, and in the long run it is useful.

I’m doing integrals in kumon, while I’m doing simple algebra/pre-algebra in school.

It does help.

I don’t know what’s up with other people’s kumon centers; mine is squeaky clean, the instructors are nice and helpful and have a parttime job in math related things such as engineering.

Trust me; Kumon is worth it if you pick the right center.

Okay the instructors are nice but not every one is on a high level like that. I’m 11 and I am only on I

I have worked in the education field for 20+ years in varying capacities and through my experiences, I have learned that one size does not fit all. Starting out in my career, I taught preschool, 2nd and 4th grade. Additionally, I have worked as an ABA Therapist with children who have been on the autistic spectrum as well as children that are classified as “gifted and talented.” In all my years, I have never found that these franchised establishments work at an optimal level for students. It is more of a cookie cutter curriculum instead of providing a learning environment that is tailored around each child and their needs, weaknesses and strengths. Each child deserves to be assisted on a level that they are comfortable with whereby learning is the goal but they pull from their experiences to allow for a wider and more accurate understanding of the material. If you have a question or comment, please feel free to contact me via my website: ilenemiller.com and I would happy to provide a response.

I actually go to Kumon and the Reading program there is not helpful, and I agree with this review. The math program helps a little bit, but I am over grade level and I don’t learn anything about problem solving or anything to do with word problems. This website is wrong though on the cost of the program. To do 1 subject you need to pay $170.

I have to say, the lack of focus on fostering problem-solving skills is incredibly detrimental in older grades. Once you reach around the 6th grade, calculators are given as it no longer becomes practical to limit students by their arithmetic abilities ( try finding the decimal value of sin (17) in your head). It no longer becomes efficient to simply learn how to do mental math. Being able to rigorously apply them and understand how these concepts function will benefit a student much more than mental math. Furthermore, in popular math contests, mental math is nigh on useless. One must recognize how the concepts they learned connect and how they can be applied. This type of problem solving is the heart of mathematics and it is saddening to see it ignored in after-school programs such as these.

This is not to say that quick mental math has no value. Unless the student pursues a career in mathematics, mental math will aid them substantially. Yet so will problem solving and recognizing patterns to get from point A to point B. A balance must be achieved to create a mathematically literate student.

Hi! Reading this article just impelled me to say something. I’m a middle school kid, 7th grade, and I have been going to Kumon for about 2 and a half years now. Just so you guys know, I found Kumon very worthwhile to me, and I have already started working on differential calculus. I do know that money doesn’t grow on trees, but if you have a drive to work and become smarter and better, Kumon definitely pushed me to a better point. And honestly, I think that even if my teacher was mean, although I wouldn’t like that, I would keep going as long as I was learning something. Honestly, my parents are definitely stricter than a handful of Kumon instructors. Besides, they have examples, and while they don’t explain everything, it just takes a minute or 2 to decipher what the example means. It just takes a little thinking outside of the box. Not everything in life is super simple, like 1+1=2. In real life, when I grow up, I’m sure it will be much more difficult.

I’ve attended Kumon for several years now and am now in Level O of math and have completed the English course as well. I believe that these opinions of Kumon are different from the ones that I have received from my peers because of who their from. Kumon is originally a Japanese institution so, naturally, people not of the Japanese culture would find it very different. In Asia, specifically the Philippines, where I grew up, Kumon is HUGE. Parents purposely send their children to not only improve their mathematics skills, but to shoot their child ahead of their class. From my experience, Kumon is a highly competitive environment where we would all scramble to be the best. My peers and I have come to love it and accept how it helped us become top of our grades. It saddens me to hear that people and students outside of Asia do not find Kumon to be worth it or effective. But it was interesting to hear a different opinion than what’s the norm over here!

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IMAGES

  1. What is Kumon?

    does kumon help with homework

  2. How to use the new Kumon homework recording sheets

    does kumon help with homework

  3. KUMON AT HOME: A PARENT’S GUIDE

    does kumon help with homework

  4. Five productive ways for parents to help their children with homework

    does kumon help with homework

  5. KUMON CONNECT

    does kumon help with homework

  6. Give kids a smart start on their learning journey with Kumon

    does kumon help with homework

COMMENTS

  1. What is Kumon?

    Kumon was designed as a home-based program, and most of your child's work will be completed at home. That's because consistent daily study is the key to building skills and habits that stick. Just 15 to 30 minutes of work a day can go a long way! We recommend that students set a "Kumon Time" to do their work every day.

  2. About Kumon

    Kumon students typically visit the study centre once or twice a week and are given homework to do for the other 6 days. ... Kumon does work but parents can certainly Do It Themselves with some guidance. ... and the teachers were surprised by her academic achievement. I like the idea where Kumon workbooks can help a child progress in their own ...

  3. 20 Pros and Cons of Kumon

    Cons of Kumon. Time-Intensive: Daily practice can be demanding for some students and families. Balancing Kumon with other extracurricular activities, schoolwork, and family time can be a challenge. Cost: Participation in Kumon often requires a financial commitment. While many find the investment worth it, it might be a strain on some family budgets.

  4. Kumon FAQs

    Kumon FAQs - Kids' Tutoring Programs & After School ...

  5. Kumon is Better Than Tutoring and Here's Why

    Kumon was designed as a home-based program, so most of a child's work will be completed at home. That's because the consistent daily study is the key to building skills and habits that stick. Seeing a tutor once or twice a week means the potential for loss of learning in between. Just 15 to 30 minutes of work each day can go a long way!

  6. The Kumon Method

    The Kumon Method. The Kumon Method of Learning is designed to help any child of any ability progress to their maximum potential and become enthusiastic learners. Through worksheet study and Instructor guidance, students work at the 'just-right' level to build ability and fluency in small manageable steps. Students move up through worksheet ...

  7. What is Kumon?

    Kumon is a self-learning programme with each student receiving regular support from their Instructor. The carefully developed worksheets teach students how to find the answer for themselves, whilst their Instructor offers guidance when necessary. The key role of each Kumon Instructor is to observe their students working, either in the centre or ...

  8. Does Kumon Really Work?

    3. 1.3/5 - (184 votes) Kumon is a mathematics and reading-based learning franchise that started in Japan and has now expanded worldwide. In the United States the focus is on math and reading and can be broken down by the goal you're trying to achieve, whether to catch your child up, challenge them, or get them started learning at an earlier age.

  9. What Is Kumon? Does Kumon Really Work?

    In 1954, Toru Kumon, a high school math teacher in Japan, began developing materials to help his second grade son who was struggling in math. With a few key principles in mind, Mr. Kumon created a series of sequenced materials for his son to complete after school. His son improved in math; Mr. Kumon's neighbors heard about this success and ...

  10. How does Kumon work?

    How it works. 1.Easing them in. Following an initial diagnostic test, your child will study familiar work to build their confidence, develop their study skills and build work habits. From day one, the Kumon Instructor will be working on building your child's concentration, ensuring they sit with a good posture and work at a steady rhythm, as ...

  11. For those of you who did Kumon, was it even worth it? : r/ABCDesis

    Kumon is meh - good for reps & intro to some higher level concepts but really just rote memorization and utterly lacking in creativity. There's usually some group (either through school or independently) that studies competition math problems to prep for AMC 10/12 -> AIME -> USAJMO / USAMO that I think was incredibly helpful, especially for anyone thinking about quantitative finance careers ...

  12. Kumon vs Khan Academy: Which Offers the Best Tutoring Approach?

    Pros : Cons : Personalized Learning: Kumon online tutoring provides a personalized learning plan for each student based on their current level of knowledge and learning goals.This means that students can work at their own pace and receive individualized attention from their tutor. Lack of Interest: Kumon follows the approach of solving the same worksheet multiple times until the student ...

  13. Kumon: homework help, discussions, and answers

    I was looking for tutoring programs and came upon learning about kumon so I have some questions about it including my situation. Im currently in grade 11 doing functions right now but I'm having a hard time remembering my basics (like fractions and doing mental math as my math teacher makes us do quizzes without a calculator) I want to be able to gain a better understanding of math concepts ...

  14. IXL vs Kumon: Which Is Best For Your Child in 2024?

    IXL vs Kumon: Comparison Understanding IXL What is IXL? IXL is a subscription-based homeschool learning website for Pre-K - 12 students. IXL uses advanced learning technology for online video lessons.IXL offers analytics and recommendations which help parents to support teaching and learning for their kids with a clear focus on outcomes.

  15. Parent: Questioning about continuing with Kumon : r/Kumon

    Kumon is quite popular in the US, since parents are concerned that their children do not get enough homework at school. The Kumon method has its credit: daily practice, step-by-step worksheets, incremental difficulty, advancing only upon mastery. In fact, any sort of learning material can be administered in the Kumon-like way. However, I ...

  16. Kumon

    How does Kumon work? Kumon goes beyond tutoring. Instead, children actively develop critical thinking skills while ... There is no "right" age - Kumon can help your child advance in school - regardless of age and ... Doing homework each night also becomes less daunting and time-consuming - a plus for both students and parents. And

  17. Tips to Help Your Children Complete Kumon Homework

    complete their Kumon homework every day: "Collaboration between parents and the child‟s Kumon Instructor is important. Recognizing each person‟s role will help the process of getting the child to do Kumon more successfully." - Thao Jones, Kumon Instructor from Portland, OR "My daughter gets to use her Dad‟s desk to do Kumon. This ...

  18. Your Child Hates Kumon? Try This

    1) Stop Kumon. photo credit: Afroswede. Stopping the Kumon would be the easy option, No more complaining from your son, no more marking those workbooks and no more fees to pay out. However since it's likely you started your son on Kumon to support and or extend his maths learning then you'd want to replace it with something else.

  19. Top 5 Kumon Alternatives [Sites like Kumon]

    Kumon is a private tutoring company that offers math and reading programs for students of all ages. The company has over 4 million students enrolled in its programs worldwide. The program has been around for decades. It is known for its rigorous math and reading programs that can help students improve their skills at their own pace.

  20. How Kumon Is Different Than Tutoring

    Confidence is Key. Kumon Students don't just learn math or reading. They learn how to learn. Students begin at a comfortable starting point for a reason. In early levels, they build focus and speed, as they work to complete worksheets quickly and without stopping. They develop confidence, as they see that they can achieve 100% in a subject ...

  21. On average how much homework does a Kumon student employee grade

    The instructor at my Kumon says that we should ideally grade 1 5 page packet in 15 seconds, so you could use that metric to guess. There are a lot of variables in how much an individual marks. Varying number of pages per book depending on the student. The standard for most levels is 5, some students start start at 10, others at 20 if they start ...

  22. 8 Things to Hate about Kumon

    3) Kumon instructors don't teach. In fact instructors spend around a maximum of 10 minutes with each student each session. As a parent tutor, there will be times when you can tutor your child while preparing a meal. or running your business. Children love being independent, but not always when it comes to school work.

  23. Homework Routine Infographic: A Parent's Guide for Establishing One

    Parent involvement and support at home is key to the success of our students. Here are the five best practice tips to help you properly implement a homework routine with your child. Create a distraction free study area. Establish a consistent home routine. Guide your child through Kumon. Recognize accomplishments. Develop important study habits.