There is no maths in chemistry that is beyond standard maths level. In my opinion, the difficulty that students have with the maths in chemistry has far more to do with it being explained in an overly complicated way than it has to do with the difficulty of the maths itself. This is not to say it won't be a challenge at times.
Completely agree with this.
Chemistry maths isn't hard because the maths is hard. The maths is literally just simple algebra that you've been doing since year 7. The difficulty is understanding the concepts behind the question and hence knowing what formulas to apply and why.
If you just do more practise problems that the people around you, you will be okay. There really aren't that many types of questions that are asked. Pretty much all titration questions are identical. Once it clicks, and it may take a while, you can do them super easily.
I recommend writing out the steps you need to solve each problem before you solve it.
Say you saw a simple titration question, you should write the following steps.
1) Determine how much of the base was added from the burette
2) Since we know the concentraiton of the base, hence determine the moles of the base added
3) We know the moles of base and acid are equal, hence n(base) = n(acid).
4) We know the initial volume of the acid, thus we can solve c(acid) = n/v.
Hence we have solved the problem.
See, dirt simple maths. It's basically just one equation, c = n/v.
If you can write this out each time, eventually, you will be able to remember the steps on how to solve a titration problem much faster. Then you just need to modify your steps slightly for harder problems.