Parenting · Learning science

How to read your child's worksheet (beyond the score)

LearnAlice2 min read
A worksheet with margin notes and a highlighter

Most of us do the same thing with a returned worksheet: glance at the number circled at the top, say "well done" or "let's do better next time," and move on. But that number is the least useful thing on the page.

A score compresses a dozen different skills into a single digit. Two children can both get 6 out of 10 and have completely different gaps — one who understands the concept but makes arithmetic slips, and one who has memorised a procedure they don't actually understand. The score hides exactly the thing you want to see.

Read the mistakes, not the marks

The signal is in how the wrong answers are wrong. Group them:

  • Careless slips — the method is right, a number got copied wrong. These aren't a learning gap; they're an attention gap.
  • Consistent errors — the same mistake in the same place every time. This is a genuine misconception worth addressing directly.
  • Blanks — a question left untouched often means "I didn't know where to start," which is different from getting it wrong.

When you sort a worksheet this way, the "one thing to practise next" usually becomes obvious.

The goal isn't a higher score next week. It's understanding which specific skill is shaky, so practice actually targets it.

Turn one worksheet into a pattern

A single worksheet is a snapshot. The real picture comes from watching the same skill across several weeks. If long division wobbles three sheets in a row, that's a signal. If it wobbled once and then held, that was just a bad day.

This is tedious to track by hand — which is exactly the problem LearnAlice was built to solve. Every worksheet your child completes becomes evidence, mapped to the specific skills your school board names, so the pattern surfaces on its own.

A five-minute routine

  1. Skim for the blanks first — they tell you where confidence runs out.
  2. Sort the wrong answers into slips vs. misconceptions.
  3. Pick one misconception to practise this week. Just one.
  4. Note it, and check the same skill on next week's sheet.

That's it. No red pen required — just a shift from how many to which ones, and why.

ParentingLearning science

Worksheets are the input. Clarity is the output.

LearnAlice turns every worksheet your child completes into a clear picture of what they've mastered, what's still developing, and the one thing to practise next — in your school board's own language.

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