Protect a calm, regular routine
Children learn best in short, regular sessions rather than long, anxious ones. You do not need to teach the content; you simply need to help protect the time — fifteen focused minutes a few times a week, free from distractions. Consistency is the single biggest lever a parent controls, and it matters far more than any individual worksheet.
Praise effort, not just results
How you respond to a wrong answer shapes whether your child keeps trying. Because AMO has no penalty for mistakes, it is the perfect environment to model a healthy attitude: treat errors as interesting information, not failures. When your child gets something wrong, a calm “let’s see what happened here” teaches far more than disappointment ever could.
A child who associates maths with encouragement will keep going for years; one who associates it with pressure often quietly gives up.
Be the study partner, not the examiner
You can be genuinely useful even without knowing the answers. Ask your child to explain a problem to you — teaching it out loud is one of the most powerful ways to deepen understanding, and it works precisely because you are not the expert. Curiosity from a parent (“why does that work?”) invites a child to reason aloud, which is exactly the skill AMO rewards.
Handle the language hurdle together
Since AMO is sat in English, one concrete, non-mathematical way to help is with vocabulary. Keep a shared list of unfamiliar English maths words and their Chinese meanings, and review it together. This is something a parent can do hand-in-hand with a child regardless of their own maths background — and it removes one of the most common stumbling blocks.
Keep perspective on results
Finally, remember what the contest is really for. AMO is a tool to build confidence and a love of problem-solving, not a verdict on your child’s worth or future. Celebrate the growth — a percentile that climbs year on year, a child who now enjoys a hard problem — and let the medals be a happy bonus. That perspective, more than any technique, is what helps a young mathematician flourish. If you would like tailored, low-pressure pointers for your child’s grade, message us on WhatsApp and ask.
This site is the AMO (American Mathematics Olympiad) guide operated by Hanlin Education, an authorized registration partner for AMO. AMO is organized by SIMCC (Singapore) together with Southern Illinois University for grades 2–12, and is not the MAA’s American Mathematics Competitions (AMC). We help China-based families register the official way. Confirmed errors are corrected within 7 working days.