1Number and place value
- Place value and rounding.
- Factors, multiples and prime numbers.
- Divisibility tests and remainders.
- Order of operations.
2Fractions, ratio and percent
- Equivalent fractions and common denominators.
- Fraction of a quantity.
- Ratio sharing.
- Benchmark percentages.
3Geometry and measurement
- Perimeter and area.
- Angles on lines and around a point.
- Symmetry and visual geometry.
- Units and scale.
4Patterns, counting and data
- Number patterns and repeating cycles.
- Tables, tree diagrams and organised lists.
- Simple probability and data reading.
- Hidden-operation word problems.
6Study plan and tips
More than 30 hours
Test foundation, practise advanced patterns, then complete one full mock exam.
10-30 hours
Do a mock exam first, find weak topics, then practise the related topic lesson deliberately.
Less than 10 hours
Memorise the formula map, redo mistakes, and complete one mixed timed set.
Tips
Use the AceAchievers Foundation lesson first, then move into advanced AMC question types.
1Algebra and equations
- Expanding and factorising.
- Substitution into expressions.
- Linear equations.
- Number patterns and sequences.
2Ratio, percent and rates
- Ratio sharing.
- Percentage increase and decrease.
- Reverse percentages.
- Speed, distance and time.
3Geometry and trigonometry
- Pythagoras' theorem.
- Similar triangles.
- Angle reasoning.
- Circle area and circumference.
4Counting and probability
- Product rule and organised cases.
- Ordered vs unordered counting.
- Complements.
- Probability experiments.
6Study plan and tips
More than 30 hours
Foundation diagnostic, advanced topic drills, full mock exam, then targeted repair.
10-30 hours
Start with a mock exam, rank weak topics, then practise the related course modules deliberately.
Less than 10 hours
Formula map, redo mistakes, then practise Q21-Q25 before attempting Q26-Q30.
Tips
Use the AceAchievers Foundation lesson first if algebra, geometry or counting basics are unstable.
1Algebra and equations
- Expansion and factorisation.
- Quadratics and substitutions.
- Indices and scientific notation.
- Simultaneous equations.
2Relationships and graphs
- Gradient and intercept.
- Linear relationships.
- Quadratic relationships.
- Coordinate geometry.
3Geometry and trigonometry
- Pythagoras' theorem.
- Similar figures.
- Right-angle trigonometry.
- Circle and angle facts.
4Counting, statistics and probability
- Combinations and arrangements.
- Complement counting.
- Box plots and spread.
- Expected value intuition.
6Study plan and tips
More than 30 hours
Foundation diagnostic, advanced algebra/geometry/counting, full mock, then AIMO bridge.
10-30 hours
Do one mock exam, identify weak topics, then practise related topic courses deliberately.
Less than 10 hours
Memorise formulas, practise Q21-Q25, and review every missed mock question by topic.
Tips
Use AceAchievers Foundation lessons if algebra, graphing, geometry or probability formulas are not fluent.
1Number theory lemmas
- Divisibility and greatest common divisor.
- Modular arithmetic.
- Parity and invariants.
- Integer bounds.
2Algebra and inequalities
- Factorisation and substitution.
- Sequences and recurrence.
- Inequality proof.
- Working backwards from target form.
3Geometry proof toolkit
- Similarity and ratio chasing.
- Circle angle facts.
- Area comparison.
- Auxiliary lines.
4Combinatorics and invariants
- Counting by cases.
- Complement counting.
- Pigeonhole principle.
- Invariants and monovariants.
6Study plan and tips
More than 30 hours
Test foundation, complete advanced proof modules, then do an AIMO mock and rewrite solutions.
10-30 hours
Do a mock exam first, identify weak domains, then practise the matching topic course deliberately.
Less than 10 hours
Review this lemma map, attempt one mock, and rewrite two complete solutions slowly.
Tips
Use AceAchievers Foundation lessons if algebra, geometry or number theory facts are not automatic.
Younger JSO students do not need more random facts. They need school science connected into mechanisms, data and transfer.
Core knowledge map
- Biology: cells, body systems, ecosystems and adaptation.
- Chemistry: particles, mixtures, reactions and materials.
- Physics: forces, energy, light, heat and electricity.
- Earth science: rocks, weather, climate and systems.
Competition thinking
| Skill | What to practise |
| Data reading | Graphs, tables, units and trends. |
| Mechanism | Explain why a result happens. |
| Experiment | Variables, controls and fair tests. |
| Transfer | Apply school concepts to unfamiliar contexts. |
Weekly routine
- Read one science news story and identify the school topic.
- Practise one graph or data question.
- Write one mechanism explanation in 4-5 sentences.
- Review one past-style multi-topic question.
Watch for these traps
- Confusing correlation with causation.
- Ignoring units on graphs.
- Memorising definitions without knowing examples.
- Writing vague explanations instead of cause-effect chains.
Soft next stepUse AceAchievers Science Signals to connect real science news to school science and JSO-style thinking.
Year 9-10 JSO preparation should bridge school science into senior-style reasoning: mechanisms, models, uncertainty and experimental design.
Advanced focus map
- Biology: respiration, genetics, ecosystems and feedback systems.
- Chemistry: reactions, bonding, acids, bases and conservation.
- Physics: motion, energy, circuits, waves and forces.
- Earth science: climate systems, plate tectonics and cycles.
Question style upgrade
| From | To |
| Recall a fact | Use the fact in a new system. |
| Read a graph | Explain trend, anomaly and limitation. |
| Name a variable | Design the fair comparison. |
| Explain one cause | Trace a chain of mechanisms. |
Data checklist
- Identify axes, units and scale.
- Describe the trend before explaining it.
- Separate observation from inference.
- Check whether the evidence supports the claim.
- Write limitations clearly.
Bridge to ASO
- Choose one discipline to deepen each term.
- Practise past-style ASO snippets for exposure.
- Build a concept map, not just notes.
- Use science news to practise transfer and evaluation.
Soft next stepFor competition science, build an Ace pathway: accelerated concepts, science signal practice, then JSO/ASO exam readiness.
Many parents ask whether Year 7 should prepare for AMC or AIMO. The better question is: what evidence shows the student is ready for the next layer?
Quick comparison
| Path | Best for | Main signal |
| AMC | Y3-12 broad competition exposure | Non-routine problem solving |
| AIMO | Y7-10 high performers | Depth, stamina, written reasoning |
| AMO pathway | Elite invited students | Proof-based olympiad mathematics |
Readiness signs
- Move to AIMO if the student can explain solutions, not just guess answers.
- Stay with AMC if accuracy and timing still fluctuate.
- Add olympiad-style work when the student enjoys one hard problem for 30 minutes.
- Do not rush proof writing before problem representation is strong.
Parent decision rule
- Can my child solve Q21-Q25 reliably?
- Can my child attempt Q26-Q30 without panic?
- Can my child write why a method works?
- Does my child enjoy deep problems enough to sustain training?
Common mistake
Treating AIMO as a status jump rather than a readiness jump. AIMO is powerful when a student is ready for depth;
otherwise, it can create frustration without strengthening fundamentals.
Soft next stepUse the AMC Junior or AIMO AceAchievers pathway based on the student's current evidence, not just year level.
The strongest students do not do every competition. They choose the right exposure at the right time, then prepare with depth.
Competition pathway by stage
Y3-4Maths: KSF, AMC Middle PrimaryFocus: curiosity, pattern spotting, confidence.
Y5-6Maths: AMC Upper Primary, CAT, BebrasFocus: diagrams, logic, counting, careful reading.
Y7-8Maths: AMC Junior, APSMO Y7-8, CAT. Science: Big Science, JSO Y7-8.Focus: non-routine questions and science transfer.
Y9-10Maths: AMC Intermediate, AIMO, CAT. Science: JSO Y9-10, ASO exposure.Focus: written reasoning, mechanisms, data.
Y11-12Maths: AMO pathway. Science: ASO. Coding: AIO.Focus: discipline depth and high-performance pathway.
How to use this roadmap
- Choose one broad benchmark and one stretch pathway per year.
- Do not overload the calendar; use competitions to guide training.
- Review after each sitting: topic gaps, thinking gaps, stamina gaps.
Shareable rule
If a competition does not change what your child practises next, it is only a calendar event.
The value comes from turning results and preparation into a better learning pathway.
Soft next stepDownload the grade-specific AMC or JSO sheet, then choose one clear preparation focus for the next 8-10 weeks.