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Online Maths Tuition For Class 6: A Practical Guide For Singapore Primary 6 Students

Updated April 30, 2026Singapore
Tutorly.sg editorial team
Singapore-focused study guides aligned to MOE exam formats.
  • Tutorly.sg has been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA)
  • Tutorly.sg has been used by thousands of users in Singapore

If you’re in Primary 6 oraparentofaP6childor a parent of a P 6 child, you already know: maths this year is no joke.

Fractions get messy, ratio questions suddenly have “before and after”, and word problems feel like mini-compositions. On top of that, there’s CCA, school homework, maybe other tuition… and then PSLE is just sitting there in the background.

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That’s where online maths tuition for Primary 6 can really help — if you use it properly.

In this guide, I’ll walk you through:

  • How online maths tuition supports P 6 students specifically for PSLE
  • A step-by-step way to use an AI tutor like Tutorly.sg effectively
  • Concrete PSLE exam strategies you can start using now
  • How to practise with worksheets (including harder variants)
  • Common mistakes P 6 students make with online help — and how to avoid them

Throughout, I’ll use Singapore terms: MOE syllabus, PSLE, Primary 6, and the exact topics you’re actually doing in school.

By the way, Tutorly.sg is a 24/7 AI tutor website built for Singapore students, from Primary 1 to JC 2, fully aligned with the MOE syllabus. It’s been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA) and used by thousands of students in Singapore, especially during exam periods.

You can try it here:


Why Online Maths Tuition Matters So Much In Primary 6

In Primary 3–5, you can sometimes “get by” with last-minute revision. By Primary 6, that stops working.

Here’s what changes at P 6:

  1. Concepts combine
    Questions don’t just test “fractions” or “ratio” alone. You might see:

    • Fractions + ratio
    • Percentage + discount + GST
    • Speed + time + distance + units conversion
  2. PSLE problem sums are longer
    You get multi-step questions where:

    • The first part feels “easy”
    • The second or third part suddenly becomes much harder
    • One careless mistake in the earlier step ruins the whole thing
  3. Time pressure is real
    In PSLE Maths:

    • Paper 1: No calculator, lots of short questions, speed matters
    • Paper 2: Calculator allowed, but questions are longer and trickier

Online maths tuition, when done right, helps you:

  • Get instant explanations when you’re stuck (instead of waiting for tuition class)
  • Practise exam-style questions that match the MOE syllabus
  • Learn step-by-step methods you can reuse in school tests and PSLE

And because it’s online, you can fit it into your own schedule — even if you reach home late from school or CCA.


Why Use Tutorly.sg For Primary 6 Maths?

There are many websites and overseas apps out there, but most are not designed specifically for Singapore PSLE Maths.

“Access more than 1000+ past year papers to practice”
👉 Start a paper today and test yourself like it’s the real exam.

Study smarter with Tutorly.sg

Tutorly.sg is different because:

  • It’s built only for Singapore students P1toJC2P 1 to JC 2
  • The content is aligned to the MOE syllabus
  • It understands PSLE-style question formats, like:
    • “Express your answer as a simplified fraction”
    • “Give your answer correct to 1 decimal place”
    • “Show your working clearly”

Some key things you can do on Tutorly.sg:

  • Ask any P 6 maths question (from school homework, assessment books, or your own practice)
  • Get step-by-step worked solutions that match what your teacher expects
  • Ask follow-up questions to clarify a step you don’t understand
  • Generate more practice questions on the same topic and difficulty

You can try the AI tutor directly here:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/app

Or read more about how it works here:
👉 https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore


Step-by-step Tutorial: How To Use Online Maths Tuition Effectively (P 6 Edition)

Let’s walk through a practical way you can use an AI tutor like Tutorly.sg for daily Primary 6 maths practice.

Step 1: Choose a specific topic, not “maths in general”

You’ll learn faster if you focus on one area at a time. For P 6, common “pain” topics are:

  • Fractions (especially word problems)
  • Ratio and proportion
  • Percentage (discount, GST, profit & loss)
  • Speed / distance / time
  • Area & volume (especially composite figures)

Pick one to start with. Example: Ratio.

Step 2: Warm-up with a simple question

Go to https://tutorly.sg/app and start with something manageable, like:

“Primary 6 Maths, Ratio:
A packet of red and blue beads is in the ratio 2 : 3.
There are 45 beads altogether.
How many blue beads are there?”

Let Tutorly.sg show you the step-by-step solution. As you read:

  • Pause at each step
  • Ask yourself: “Can I explain this step in my own words?”
  • If not, ask a follow-up question like:

    “Explain why you did this step in a simpler way.”

You’re training your brain to understand the method, not just copy the answer.

Step 3: Try a similar question on your own

Next, ask Tutorly.sg to give you a similar question, for example:

“Give me another Primary 6 ratio question similar to the previous one, but with different numbers.”

Now:

  1. Solve it on paper first (don’t look at the solution yet).
  2. Only after you finish, ask Tutorly.sg:

    “What is the full step-by-step solution for this question?”

Compare your working to the model solution:

  • Did you use the same method?
  • Did you skip any important step?
  • Did you get the same final answer?

If your answer is wrong, don’t just accept “oh ok, I see”. Ask:

  • “Where did my method go wrong if I did it this way: … ?”
  • “Is my method acceptable for PSLE?”

Tutorly.sg can’t check every step you wrote, but it can show the correct full solution and explain why its method works, so you can adjust your own.

Step 4: Move to slightly harder, PSLE-style questions

Once you’re comfortable with basic questions, you should push yourself a bit.

Ask:

“Give me a challenging PSLE-style Primary 6 ratio word problem with 2–3 steps, and then show the full step-by-step solution after I try it.”

Again, try it on your own first. Only then check the solution.

This step is important because PSLE questions are often multi-step, and you must train your brain to:

  • Decide what to do first
  • Translate words into maths
  • Keep track of units and what the question is asking

Step 5: Do quick daily sessions (20–30 minutes is enough)

Instead of 2–3 hours once a week, it’s more effective to:

  • Spend 20–30 minutes a day on a focused topic
  • Mix:
    • 2–3 easier questions (to build confidence)
    • 2–3 medium questions
    • 1 harder question

You can do this on school days, even if you’re tired. Short, consistent practice helps your brain remember methods better than cramming right before exams.


Exam Strategy Guide: How Online Tuition Supports PSLE Maths

Online maths tuition isn’t just for homework. Used properly, it can be a powerful exam strategy tool.

Here’s how you can use it specifically for PSLE-style preparation.

1. Master the key P 6 / PSLE topics

Some topics appear very frequently in PSLE Maths:

  • Fractions (including mixed numbers and word problems)
  • Ratio beforeandafter,totalunchanged,onequantitychangedbefore-and-after, total unchanged, one quantity changed
  • Percentage increase/decrease, profit & loss, GST, discount
  • Speed (especially “journey” questions)
  • Area & volume (including composite figures and water level questions)

On Tutorly.sg, you can focus your practice by saying something like:

“Give me 5 PSLE-style Primary 6 fraction word problems, with full solutions.”

Then:

  • Time yourself e.g.25minutesfor5questionse.g. 25 minutes for 5 questions
  • Check your answers using the step-by-step solutions
  • Note which types you keep getting wrong

This helps you identify weak areas early, instead of waiting until the school gives you a mock exam.

2. Train for Paper 1 vs Paper 2 differently

Paper 1 (Booklet A & B, no calculator)

Focus on:

  • Mental calculation
  • Estimation
  • Avoiding careless mistakes

Use online tuition to:

  • Practise short-answer questions under time pressure
  • Ask for explanations of tricks or shortcuts you don’t understand
  • Get step-by-step solutions for questions you keep making mistakes on

Paper 2 (calculator allowed)

Focus on:

  • Interpreting long questions
  • Planning multi-step solutions
  • Writing clear working

Use Tutorly.sg to:

  • Practise 2–4 mark word problems
  • Learn standard formats for working (e.g. model drawing, ratio tables, units conversion)
  • Check if your method is similar to the model solution

3. Learn “exam-style wording” and common traps

Online PSLE-style questions help you get used to common tricky wording, like:

  • “How much more…” vs “How many times more…”
  • “What fraction of the original amount…”
  • “Express your answer as a percentage correct to 1 decimal place.”

When you see a question you got wrong, ask Tutorly.sg:

“Explain which part of this question is tricky and what students usually misunderstand.”

Over time, you’ll start to recognise patterns, such as:

  • When you should use a bar model
  • When to think of “before and after”
  • When to compare part vs whole vs part vs part

4. Build a personal “error log”

This is something top students quietly do.

Whenever you use online tuition and get a question wrong:

  1. Write it down in a notebook or digital file:

    • Topic: e.g. “Ratio – total unchanged”
    • The question (short form)
    • Why you got it wrong
    • The correct method (in your own words)
  2. Once a week, use Tutorly.sg to:

    • Recreate similar questions
    • Test if you’ve really fixed that weakness

Over time, your error log becomes your personal PSLE revision book, targeted exactly at your weak spots.


Worksheet Practice: From Basic To Hard Variants (With Examples)

Let’s go through sample questions you can practise, grouped by difficulty. You can use these as a guide to generate more on Tutorly.sg.

A. Basic Level: Build Confidence

1. Fractions – basic operations

Question:
3416= ?\frac{3}{4} - \frac{1}{6} = \ ?

What to focus on:

  • Finding common denominator
  • Careful subtraction
  • Simplifying the final fraction

You can ask Tutorly.sg:

“Show me the step-by-step working for this Primary 6 fraction question, and explain how to find the common denominator.”

2. Percentage – simple increase

Question:
A shirt costs $40. It is increased in price by 10%. What is the new price of the shirt?

Focus on:

  • Finding 10% of 40
  • Adding to the original price
  • Writing units clearly (“$”)

B. Intermediate Level: Typical P 6 / PSLE-style

3. Ratio – total unchanged

Question:
The ratio of Ali’s money to Ben’s money is 3:53 : 5.
If Ali has $24,
(a) How much money does Ben have?
(b) What is the total amount of money they have altogether?

Here you should:

  • Identify the value of 1 unit
  • Multiply to find Ben’s share
  • Add to find the total

On Tutorly.sg, you can ask:

“Give me 3 more similar Primary 6 ratio questions where the total is unchanged, with step-by-step solutions.”

4. Fractions – word problem

Question:
Mira spent 25\frac{2}{5} of her money on a book and 14\frac{1}{4} of her money on a pencil case.
She had $18 left.
How much money did she have at first?

Key ideas:

  • Total fraction spent = 25+14\frac{2}{5} + \frac{1}{4}
  • Fraction left = 1(fraction spent)1 - \text{(fraction spent)}
  • Use “fraction of whole = amount” to find the whole

Ask the AI tutor:

“Explain this question using bar models and show all the steps clearly.”


C. Harder Variants: PSLE-style Multi-step Questions

Now the fun (and slightly painful) part. These are the kind of questions that often separate AL 1–AL 3 from the rest.

5. Challenging Ratio – before and after

Question:
At first, the ratio of the number of red beads to blue beads in a box was 2:52 : 5.
When 24 red beads and 16 blue beads were added to the box,
the ratio of red beads to blue beads became 5:85 : 8.
How many red beads were in the box at first?

What you need to do:

  1. Set up a “before” and “after” ratio table
  2. Use the change in quantity to match the change in units
  3. Be careful not to mix up red vs blue

Try it fully on your own, then ask Tutorly.sg:

“Show me a full step-by-step solution for this Primary 6 ratio before-and-after question. After that, explain why your method works.”

Then ask:

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![Secondary Science topics you can practise on Tutorly.sg]/app/blogimages/middle2.png/app/blog-images/middle 2.png

“Give me 2 more similar but slightly different questions hardPSLEstylehard PSLE-style to practise.”

6. Mixed Fractions & Ratio – tricky word problem

Question:
A tank was filled with 23\frac{2}{3} of water.
24 litres of water was added and the tank became 56\frac{5}{6} full.

(a) What is the capacity of the tank?
(b) How much water was in the tank at first?

Key skills:

  • Recognise that the difference between 56\frac{5}{6} and 23\frac{2}{3} is the fraction that represents 24 litres
  • Find 1 unit (fraction of tank)
  • Then find the whole (capacity)
  • Finally, find the amount at first

Use Tutorly.sg to:

  • Check your working
  • Ask for alternative methods (e.g. using bar models vs direct fraction method)

7. Percentage & Profit – exam-type

Question:
A shopkeeper bought some pens for $180.
He sold all of them at a 25% profit.

(a) How much money did he receive from selling all the pens?
(b) If he sold 3 more pens at the same selling price per pen, his total profit would have been $60 more. What was the cost price of each pen?

This question combines:

  • Percentage profit
  • Total profit vs profit per item
  • Algebra-like thinking eventhoughyoureinP6even though you’re in P 6

Ask the AI tutor:

“Break down this question into small steps and explain the reasoning behind each step, suitable for a Primary 6 student.”

Then generate:

“Give me another similar Primary 6 percentage profit question that is slightly harder, with full working shown.”


How To Turn These Into Real Worksheets

You can turn online practice into structured “worksheets” like this:

  1. Choose 1 topic (e.g. Ratio)

  2. On Tutorly.sg, request:

    “Create a 10-question Primary 6 ratio worksheet:

    • 3 easy questions
    • 4 medium questions
    • 3 hard PSLE-style questions
      Include the full step-by-step solutions after the worksheet.”
  3. Copy the questions into your notebook or print them

  4. Do them under timed conditions e.g.3040minutese.g. 30–40 minutes

  5. Only then, reveal the solutions and mark your work

This way, you’re using online tuition to generate and explain, but your brain is still doing the heavy lifting.


Common Mistakes P 6 Students Make With Online Maths Tuition

Online help is powerful, but a lot of students use it in ways that don’t actually improve their marks.

Here are the big traps to avoid.

1. Copying answers without thinking

You paste the question, see the full solution, copy it, and move on.

Problem:
You feel like you “understand”, but when the same pattern appears in a test, you’re lost.

Fix:

  • Always try the question on your own first (even if you’re not sure)
  • When reading the solution, pause after each step and ask:
    • “Why did they do this?”
    • “Could I have seen this on my own?”
  • If the answer is “no”, ask Tutorly.sg to re-explain that specific step in simpler terms

2. Treating every question as brand new

Many PSLE questions are actually repeats of patterns with different numbers.

If you never group them, every question feels scary and new.

Fix:

  • When you solve a question, label it:

    • “Ratio – before and after, total changed”
    • “Fractions – part left, part spent”
    • “Percentage – discount + GST”
  • Ask Tutorly.sg:

    “What is the general method or pattern for this type of question?”

Over time, you’ll recognise these patterns instantly in exams.

3. Not writing full working

Some students use online tuition and then think:

“Since I know the answer, I’ll just skip writing full working in my own practice.”

Then in exams, they lose marks even when their final answer is correct.

Fix:

  • Always practise writing your working clearly:

    • Show each step
    • Include units (cm\text{cm}, m2\text{m}^2, $, etc.)
    • Label what each number represents
  • After seeing a solution on Tutorly.sg, rewrite it in your own words and own layout. This helps you build exam-ready habits.

4. Ignoring time management

Online practice can become “slow thinking”: you take 10–15 minutes per question, then feel confident… until the exam clock starts.

Fix:

  • Sometimes practise under time conditions:
    • E.g. 1 mark = about 1 minute in PSLE Maths
    • A 4-mark question shouldn’t take 15 minutes
  • Use a timer when doing sets of questions
  • After that, use Tutorly.sg to:
    • Identify which questions slowed you down
    • Learn faster methods (if any)

5. Using overseas content not aligned to MOE

There are many international maths websites, but:

  • Syllabus is different
  • Question style is different
  • Some methods don’t match what MOE or your teacher expects

That’s why using a Singapore-specific platform like Tutorly.sg helps. The questions, terms, and solution style are all tuned to PSLE and MOE requirements.


How Parents Can Support P 6 Kids Using Online Maths Tuition

If you’re a parent, you don’t need to know all the maths methods yourself to help.

Here’s what you can do:

  1. Set a simple routine

    • Example: “20–30 minutes of Tutorly.sg maths practice after dinner, 4 days a week.”
    • Let your child choose the topic (fractions, ratio, etc.) so they feel some control.
  2. Focus on consistency, not perfection

    • It’s okay if they get many questions wrong at first.
    • The key is: are they asking follow-up questions and understanding the solutions?
  3. Use it to reduce stress, not increase it

    • If your child is stuck on homework at 10pm, instead of getting angry, say:

      “Let’s put this into Tutorly.sg and see the step-by-step solution, then you explain it back to me.”

  4. Check understanding, not marks

    • Once in a while, ask your child to:
      • Teach you how to solve a question they learnt using Tutorly.sg
    • If they can explain it clearly, they’ve really understood it.

Bringing It All Together

For Primary 6 students in Singapore, online maths tuition isn’t just a “nice to have”. Used properly, it can:

  • Fill in gaps that school or weekly tuition might miss
  • Provide 24/7 access to clear, step-by-step explanations
  • Generate MOE-aligned, PSLE-style questions for targeted practice
  • Help you build confidence with hard variants, not just easy drills

Tutorly.sg was built exactly for this: to support Singapore students from Primary 1 to JC 2, aligned with the MOE syllabus and real exam formats. It’s already been used by thousands of students here and even mentioned on CNA, so you’re not experimenting with something untested.

If you’re serious about improving P 6 maths and preparing for PSLE in a smart, consistent way, it’s worth giving it a proper try.


Try Tutorly.sg For Your Primary 6 Maths Today

You can start using Tutorly.sg in a few minutes:

Use it to:

  • Clarify today’s homework
  • Generate exam-style practice
  • Get full step-by-step solutions
  • Build your own “error log” and fix weak topics

Even 20–30 minutes a day can make a big difference by the time PSLE comes around.


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