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Math Content Creator Jobs (NOW HIRING)

AI Math Content Creator

$129K/yr

We are hiring a senior math content creator who uses AI as a working partner to build, review, and refine the math content that powers our academic program. Think: a mathematician who can sit down ...

New

The Math Learning Center (MLC) is a non-profit education organization with a track record of ... We are seeking an inventive content creator to help us elevate our market presence by leveraging ...

Content Creator

White City, OR · On-site

$50K - $65K/yr

The Content Creator will be prominently featured in video and digital content across platforms ... • Mathematical Skills: Ability to perform and apply business-related calculations such as ...

Regional Content Creator

Miami, OH

$113K - $117.60K/yr

... engineering, arts and math) through our collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of ... REGIONAL CONTENT CREATOR JOB PURPOSE As Regional Content Creator, you'll support the Regional ...

Barista

Phoenix, AZ

$15 - $15.50/hr

Join our vibrant team as a dynamic Barista / Social Media Content Creator / Admin ! This exciting ... Handle basic math calculations for sales totals, cash handling, and inventory counts accurately.

Barista

Phoenix, AZ

$15 - $15.50/hr

Join our vibrant team as a dynamic Barista / Social Media Content Creator / Admin ! This exciting ... Handle basic math calculations for sales totals, cash handling, and inventory counts accurately.

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Math Content Creator information

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$15

$38

$77

How much do math content creator jobs pay per hour?

As of May 29, 2026, the average hourly pay for math content creator in the United States is $38.91, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $26.20 and $45.19 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What is a Math Content Creator job?

A Math Content Creator develops educational materials, resources, and engaging content related to mathematics. This can include writing textbooks, creating online courses, designing lesson plans, or producing videos and interactive exercises. They often work for educational companies, schools, or content platforms, ensuring that complex mathematical concepts are accessible and engaging. Strong mathematical knowledge, creativity, and communication skills are essential for this role.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in the Math Content Creator position, and why are they important?

A Math Content Creator should have a solid background in mathematics, strong writing or communication abilities, and experience in curriculum development or educational technology. Familiarity with digital platforms, tools like LaTeX, graphic design software, or video editing, and relevant certifications such as teaching credentials or subject-specific qualifications are often advantageous. Creativity, attention to detail, and the ability to simplify complex concepts are important soft skills for excelling in this role. These qualifications ensure engaging, accurate, and accessible math content tailored to diverse learners and educational settings.

What are some typical daily tasks and collaborative projects for a Math Content Creator?

A Math Content Creator typically spends their days researching curriculum standards, planning engaging math lessons or practice problems, and designing multimedia resources such as videos, infographics, or interactive quizzes. Collaboration is common with subject matter experts, educators, editors, and sometimes software developers to ensure content accuracy, clarity, and alignment with learning objectives. You may also revise materials based on feedback, monitor user engagement, and stay updated with educational trends or new teaching technologies. This teamwork helps create high-quality educational materials that effectively support student learning and curriculum goals.
What cities are hiring for Math Content Creator jobs? Cities with the most Math Content Creator job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of Math Content Creator jobs? The most popular types of Math Content Creator jobs are:
What states have the most Math Content Creator jobs? States with the most job openings for Math Content Creator jobs include:
Infographic showing various Math Content Creator job openings in the United States as of May 2026, with employment types broken down into 64% Full Time, 29% Part Time, and 7% Contract. Highlights an 93% In-person, and 7% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $80,932 per year, or $38.9 per hour.

$129K/yr

Full-time

Posted 2 days ago


Job description

We are hiring a senior math content creator who uses AI as a working partner to build, review, and refine the math content that powers our academic program. Think: a mathematician who can sit down with a topic such as systems of linear equations or quadratic functions and produce a clean, pedagogically sound set of original problems with worked solutions, in a fraction of the time it would take a traditional curriculum writer, and with the math verified correct.
We run a mastery-based academic model for serious student-athletes, and the integrity of the math content sits at the center of it. Every problem a student sees has to be mathematically correct, age-appropriate, and aligned to where the student is in the sequence. We build this library with AI in the workflow because it produces better coverage faster when an expert is steering it. We do not care how many years you spent inside a traditional curriculum house. We care about whether the math you produce is correct, the problems you write are well-designed, and you can operate AI tools fluently to do both at volume.
What You'll Do
  • Author Original Problems: Write original math problems across K through 12, spanning arithmetic, pre-algebra, algebra I and II, geometry, and pre-calculus, with full worked solutions and answer keys.
  • Audit Existing Content: Review problems already in our library for mathematical accuracy, clarity, difficulty calibration, and alignment to the intended learning objective. Correct what is wrong. Flag what needs a rewrite.
  • Operate AI Tools: Use modern AI models to draft problems, generate variants, and stress-test solutions. Verify every output. The AI accelerates production; your mathematical judgment is what makes the work usable.
  • Sequence for Mastery: Build problem sets where difficulty ramps deliberately, common misconceptions surface at the right moment, and a student who completes the set is measurably stronger on the concept.
  • Maintain Notation Standards: Keep mathematical notation, formatting, and problem structure consistent across the library so the student experience is clean and predictable.
  • Partner With the Academic Team: Take topic briefs and learning objectives from the academic lead and deliver classroom-ready content on a defined cadence.

Requirements
  • You are mathematically rigorous. Your problems are correct. Your solutions are correct. You catch the errors less careful writers miss: the sign flip, the domain restriction, the case left unchecked. Your math ships without needing a second pair of eyes to verify it.
  • You write problems that teach. You understand the difference between a problem that drills a procedure and a problem that builds understanding. You know when to ask for the answer, when to ask for the method, and when to ask the student to explain why.
  • You operate AI tools at a professional level. You have used AI models to generate, transform, and verify math content at volume. You know where they are reliable, where they break, and how to prompt and verify so the final output is correct.
  • Degree in mathematics or a closely related quantitative field. Bachelor's at minimum. Advanced degrees welcome.
  • Remote-ready setup. Stable internet, a focused workspace, and comfort working asynchronously across time zones.
  • Location. Fully remote and open to candidates worldwide. You are responsible for local tax and work authorization compliance.
Bonus Points
  • Classroom or Tutoring Experience: You have taught math in a classroom, as a tutor, or as a teaching assistant, and that experience shows in how you write problems and explanations.
  • Curriculum or Assessment Background: You have written for a textbook publisher, test prep company, edtech platform, or olympiad program, with samples available.
  • Competition Math Background: AMC, AIME, Putnam, or international olympiad participation as a student or coach.
  • LaTeX Fluency: You can produce properly typeset math without friction.

Multilingual Capability: Ability to produce content in more than one language is a plus, though all primary content is in English.