6th Grade Equations Games and Practice

Master core mathematical concepts through our interactive Socratic curriculum.

Search Intent Match

What students practice on this Equations page

This hub is for students who need free equations practice that shows the reasoning, not just the answer. It groups 30 browser-based missions around solving for an unknown while keeping both sides balanced, aligned with 6.EE.B.7.

The companion guide explains it as: Solve real-world and mathematical problems by writing and solving equations of the form x + p = q and px = q.

Practice Goals

  • Understand solving for an unknown while keeping both sides balanced.
  • Use balance scales, inverse operations, and equation mats before switching to symbolic notation.
  • Explain the answer in words, diagrams, or equations instead of guessing.

Common Mistakes

  • Moving terms across the equal sign without preserving equality.
  • Skipping the visual model and trying to memorize a procedure for equations.
  • Finishing a mission without checking whether the answer matches the original story or unit.

Use Cases

Teachers

Use after expressions and variables.

Parents

Ask what operation would undo the current operation on both sides.

Students

Complete one mission, then say what changed, what stayed the same, and why the final answer makes sense.

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🔥 Challenger Bakery

Recipe Equation Solver

Start Mission
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🔥 Challenger Bakery

Cookie Missing Cost

Start Mission
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🔥 Challenger Bakery

Donut Solve-for-X

Start Mission
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🔥 Challenger Bakery

Cake Equation Hunt

Start Mission
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🔥 Challenger Bakery

Bakery Balance Lab

Start Mission
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🧭 Explorer Bakery

Recipe Equation Solver

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Bakery

Cookie Missing Cost

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Bakery

Donut Solve-for-X

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Bakery

Bakery Balance Lab

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Bakery

Cake Equation Hunt

Start Mission
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🌱 Seedling Bakery

Recipe Equation Solver

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Bakery

Cookie Missing Cost

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Bakery

Donut Solve-for-X

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Bakery

Bakery Balance Lab

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Bakery

Cake Equation Hunt

Start Mission
⚖️
🔥 Challenger Space

Fuel Solve-for-X

Start Mission
⚖️
🔥 Challenger Space

Probe Balance Lab

Start Mission
⚖️
🔥 Challenger Space

Cargo Equation Hunt

Start Mission
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🔥 Challenger Space

Mission Equation Solver

Start Mission
⚖️
🔥 Challenger Space

Crew Missing Cost

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Space

Fuel Solve-for-X

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Space

Probe Balance Lab

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Space

Cargo Equation Hunt

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Space

Mission Equation Solver

Start Mission
⚖️
🧭 Explorer Space

Crew Missing Cost

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Space

Fuel Solve-for-X

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Space

Probe Balance Lab

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Space

Cargo Equation Hunt

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Space

Mission Equation Solver

Start Mission
⚖️
🌱 Seedling Space

Crew Missing Cost

Start Mission
FAQ

Common Questions

Everything you need to know about the Socratic experience.

01 How many Equations missions are in 6th Grade?

There are 30 missions in this topic — 10 Seedling (entry-level), 10 Explorer (core), and 10 Challenger (stretch). Each mission has 3 Socratic steps with adaptive hints.

02 Which CCSS standard does 6th Grade Equations cover?

This topic is aligned with CCSS 6.EE.B.7. Open the topic guide for the standard's full text and a step-by-step breakdown of the cognitive sub-skills.

03 What's the recommended order for Equations missions?

Start with Seedling missions to anchor the visual model, then move to Explorer for the core abstraction, and tackle Challenger only when Explorer is flawless. Difficulty badges on each card show this progression.

04 How does Grade 6 prepare for algebra?

Three big shifts: numbers extend to negatives; arithmetic becomes letters; and equations become problems to *solve*, not just check.

05 Why introduce ratios so early?

Ratios are the multiplicative version of addition: instead of asking 'how much more?' we ask 'how many times more?'. This thinking is the entry to slope, similarity, and proportional reasoning.

06 What does it mean for a math platform to be "Socratic"?

Socratic teaching answers a question with a better question. Instead of "the answer is 12", the system asks "if you had 3 groups of 4, how could you skip-count?" The goal is to externalize the learner's reasoning so they hear themselves think. Every Inquiry AI hint follows this pattern: nudge → reframe → analogy → only then a worked example, in that order.

07 What is inquiry-based learning, and how does Inquiry AI apply it?

Inquiry-based learning starts with a question, not a formula — students explore, hypothesize, and verify before being told the rule. In Inquiry AI, every mission opens with a "Discovery" step (manipulate the model), then "Abstraction" (write the equation), then "Reflect" (apply to a new case). The procedure is never given upfront; learners derive it from their own observations.