Eureka Math Practice
Great Minds · open-source curriculum. Adaptive Briveli practice mapped to each module so your kid drills exactly what they’re working on this week.
About Eureka Math
Eureka Math (also known as EngageNY in its original New York State Education Department release) is the most widely adopted open-source math curriculum in the United States. Each grade is divided into Modules, with Module 1 in every grade building the year's most foundational skill. Modules are further broken into Topics and individual Lessons, each of which uses a consistent five-part structure: Fluency Practice, Application Problem, Concept Development, Student Debrief, and Exit Ticket. The pedagogical backbone is "concept-procedure-application" — a deliberate progression from concrete representations to pictorial models to abstract notation.
Because Eureka is open-source under the Great Minds license, it is the dominant choice for charter networks, homeschool co-ops, and tutoring programs that want a coherent K-12 sequence without licensing costs. The Module structure is unusually rigorous — Module 3 in Grade 4, for example, spans 38 lessons devoted entirely to multi-digit multiplication and division — which makes parent support tricky. Briveli's Eureka mapping flattens each Module to its Briveli skill ladder so a parent can hand a child practice on the exact concept being taught that week without trying to recreate the lesson plan.
Official site: https://greatminds.org/math
Practice by Grade
Eureka Math FAQ
Is Eureka Math the same as EngageNY?+
Yes. EngageNY was the original New York State release of the Great Minds materials. Eureka Math is the Great Minds-published version with consistent lesson numbering and updated digital materials. They are content-equivalent.
Is Eureka Math free?+
The student materials are free as PDFs from Great Minds and EngageNY. Print workbooks, teacher guides, and the digital platform (Eureka Math2) are paid.
Why are Eureka Modules so long?+
Eureka deliberately spends many lessons developing each big idea concretely before moving to abstract notation. Module 3 in Grade 4 is 38 lessons because it covers all of multi-digit multiplication and division.
Practice alongside Eureka Math
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