This curriculum is based on a schedule with 50 minute classes. Here is a Google Drive folder with every handout and another folder with an answer key for every handout. Also, many problems throughout the curriculum, including all multiple choice questions, are released items retrieved from ACT, New Visions, PARCC, PSAT, SAT, and TEA. Finally, check out the pedagogy page to see snapshots of how to implement these lessons.
I’m Texas teacher and your page is amazing. I’m going to implement it in part this year and in full next year!!! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks so much, Kiara! I’m glad it’s been useful so far. Let me know when you find areas for improvement!
Hi Dane,
My name is Andy and I’m an Algebra/French Teacher in Alaska. Your website and course structure is well-organized and most importantly ENGAGING. Would you mind if used some of the pieces in creating my own school webpages and specific pieces as templates?
Hey Andy,
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it. You’re more than welcome to use anything on the site. I’m happy to share! My only ask is that everything remains free. Thanks for asking!
Thank you for sharing all of your resources! Sometimes I feel like I’m searching all over the place for different resources, so I love that you have warm-ups and concepts all in one place. Keep up the awesome work!
Thank you for the encouragement, Rachel! I’m glad the site has been useful. Feel free to send questions or feedback anytime!
Dane,
First of all, EXCELLENT website and curriculum. I greatly appreciate your dedication and hardwork you have put into all your lesson plans. I stumbled across it the end of last year while researching Dan Meyer’s 3 Act Tasks. I have been using your geometry curriculum to great effect. My kids have been greatly engaged and seem to be truly learning. I have also applaud your school for grading based on knowledge, not just test taking skills. I have applied the same kind of grading in my own classroom! I really want to thank you for helping me teach better lesson plans, especially as a newer teacher.
I do wonder, do you guys not teach any kind of piecewise functions in Algebra 1? Or go over absolute value functions/equations/inequalities? I am also teaching a remedial Algebra 1 class and have been looking for good lesson plans to help them have a better understanding.
Thanks a bunch,
Kevin Grogaard
Hey Kevin,
Thank you so much for the kind words! I really appreciate it. I’m happy to hear the site has been useful. Feel free to send feedback for improvement anytime as well!
In Texas, Algebra 1 does not include piecewise functions or absolute value functions. I believe we cover those things in Algebra 2. As for remedial Algebra 1, I’ve taught that many times, and I use most of the lessons on this site. The only difference is that I tend to spend a little more time on each concept to help solidify. This may lead to some concepts not getting enough time, so it’s important to spend the most time on the most heavily tested concepts in your state.
Hope that helps. Thanks again!
Dane, your site is absolutely terrific. The TEKS unfortunately encourage wide and shallow learning but you’ve done an masterful job in turning your curriculum into meaningful learning that encourage deep understandings. Thank you for your willingness to share. My colleague is teaching Algebra 2 next year and is interested in this style of teaching. Do you have any recommendations for places to look for Algebra 2 activities that incorporate the same style as you?
Paul,
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it!
Hello,
Thank you for this great resource. I noticed your answer key folder is empty except for day 126-138. Is there a place I can find them?
Thanks !
Hey Rus,
Thank you for the kind words! Hmm that’s strange. It may be a glitch. I just checked, and all the answer keys are showing up now. Let me know if you check again and still can’t see the rest.
Dane,
I see it now. It was a glitch on my end. Thanks again!
Hi Dane,
I’m teaching Algebra 1 this year and love your resources and concept quizzes. Out of curiosity, I noticed there is a large jump from the day 10 quiz to day 23 quiz. Is there any particular reason why the some of the content in between those days is not assessed?
Hey Kayleigh,
Thanks for the question and kind words! Here’s a detailed breakdown about why some concepts are quizzed and some aren’t. For the un-quizzed concepts between day 11 and 17, I decided that they were important, but not crucial enough to be included in the top 20ish concepts for Algebra 1. Solving One-Variable Inequalities was the toughest one to keep out. My reasoning for that one is that I’ve quizzed it in the past, and I had trouble finding ways to assess the inequality aspect at a high level. When I was grading, the solving equations portion of it ended up being the main focus. Therefore, I kept solving equations as a quizzed concept, but just decided to only spend a decent chunk of days teaching inequalities without formally assessing it.
Let me know if that helps!
Hi Dane!
First off…I LOVE your stuff. What you do with your concepts and instructional strategies are fantastic. I love the pacing and the outline of all the activities that you do. Last year my geometry PLC and I followed your timelines and addressed the same topics that you have listed. We pretty much followed it full-blown, with our twist on certain thing of course, and I must say it was a fantastic year. The kids learned so much….on a conceptual level, and retained it! We want to do the same thing this coming school year with Algebra. Couple questions….
Do you have other math teachers at your school that teach the same classes? Are you on a PLC? If so, do they do things the same way as you? Do you have to convince other teachers to do it the way you are? I’m curious what other math teachers in your building think about all this….We will have 7 different teachers teaching Algebra 1 next year and we are all supposed to use the same timelines, same assessments, same essential standards, etc. You can imagine this is difficult…
Do you feel like how you have algebra 1 right now is pretty solid? With the concepts and the pacing?
Also, do I noticed at the end of the year in Geometry you had probability lessons but no links.
We are starting the year next year in Algebra with a probability/statistics unit. Wondering if you had anything to share as far as probability goes and/or statistics? Keep up the great work! You inspire me.
-Jake
Hey Jake,
Thank you so much for the kind words! I’m really happy to hear that the curriculum has been useful.
I just sent you an email to answer your questions. Let me know if you received it. Looking forward to continuing the conversation.
Hi Dane,
I started the summer with a general search of SBG and came across your blog. I was overwhelmed at first, but have printed off each topic on SBG and feel like I’ve gotten a good understanding of what you are doing.
I teach Algebra 1 and am excited to use this new idea in the fall.
I am curious what your recent reply was to Jake concerning your feeling on how solid you felt the Algebra concepts and pacing were from last year.
Also, would there be any changes you would implement moving forward(retakes, faux quizzes, student analysis, etc)?
Hey Bailey,
I’m excited to hear that you’re diving into SBG! Feel free to ask questions any time.
As for the Algebra 1 curriculum, I feel very confident about the pacing and sequencing of the curriculum. Based on what I currently know about curriculum design, it’s as complete as I can make it.
Moving forward, I’m thinking about requiring all kids to retake their quiz the first time (if they don’t make a 100) and not necessarily require an analysis handout to be completed. However, I will basically force them to complete the analysis without technically requiring it because it’s so crucial to their learning. I do want kids to know that I want all of them to retake so they can witness their own growth. I don’t want to hinder the growth opportunity. It’ll be an interesting line to balance, but that’s what I’m reflecting on right now.
As for any retake after the 1st, those will definitely require an analysis handout and tutoring before offering the retake opportunity. The 2nd retake (or higher) is where students tend to try to work the system and do hail mary retakes.
Also, always go with your gut when you see things you would do differently in the curriculum. If problems need to be done in a different order, or there need to be more challenging problems, make those changes. None of this is fool proof!
Thanks for the comment!
Hi Dane,
I’m probably not seeing it but are there answer keys for the concept quizzes?
Hey Russ,
Thanks for asking. I actually don’t have answer keys for the quizzes. I thought about making and posting them at one point, but I was afraid of students getting a hold of them. Let me know if you want to compare answers on any specific quizzes though, and I’ll work through them.
Thank you Dane, that makes a lot of sense. Just wanted to check. Thank you again for everything here!
Hi Dane,
Just wanted to let you know I keep coming back to this blog each year…this I first visited about 4-5 years ago. Great stuff!
“which” not “this”, oops!
Hey Stephanie,
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it and am glad the site has been useful. Feel free to send feedback for improvement any time!
Hi Dane,
I noticed that your notes don’t tend to include a list of steps for solving problems. I am an Algebra II teacher, and I have been working to change my teaching style to more of a instigator of group discussions and a facilitator of learning. Your resources and articles have given me a lot of ideas. Could you explain the reasoning behind not giving a list of steps? Do students tend to struggle at first without having a specific list of steps to follow? Thanks.
Hey Kim,
Great question! I think it’s just a personal preference thing, and it’s not necessarily based on research or anything.
I’m a bit of a minimalist, so I tend to keep handouts as clean as possible with as much room to write as possible. Therefore, one reason I don’t include steps is to save space and allow for more white space on the paper.
Also, it depends on the lesson, but sometimes I do display a list of steps for students to reference. For example, I displayed this when learning the quadratic formula.
However, when I displayed those slides, I did it before teaching the content because I wanted to give students the opportunity to analyze the steps silently first and discuss with their groups after the silent time. Kind of like a mini notice and wonder moment.
This tends to be the go to teacher move I use when learning how to solve problems that have repeatable steps. Give the kids the chance to notice and wonder a bit first, discuss with groups, and then I direct teach.
May I have permission to link your website onto my google classroom site as an additional resource for my students next year? I teach Algebra 1 and have learned so much from you and your site.
Hey Carol,
Yes, you may link the website onto your Google Classroom. Thank you for asking, and thank you for the kind words!
Can I find material to work with probability? I haven´t found anything yet. Thanks
Thanks for asking, Lucas! I don’t have anything yet, but I’d check out New Visions’ unit. They have really good stuff.
Hi!! I’m a second year teacher in Dallas ISD (it’s my first year teaching Algebra, I moved up with my kids) and Geoff Krall recommended your site to me when I asked him if he knew of anyone who made STAAR-aligned curriculum. I’m really excited to use your stuff, thank you so much for making it all available! I am wondering, when there is just a worksheet or spiral practice linked of the day’s work and no facilitation notes, would you typically have students working in groups on that? Is it always supposed to be groupwork unless explicitly noted otherwise?
Thanks,
Audrey
Hey Audrey! Great to hear from another Dallas area resident! Thank you for the kind words as well.
I prefer to always keep students in groups unless we are having a test or quiz. For lessons without facilitation notes, I’d still chunk the lesson (see this post: https://whenmathhappens.com/2019/12/06/chunking-the-lesson/) because I don’t like letting students work in groups all class without guidance.
In particular, I’d make sure to do the Think-Pair-Share routine (https://whenmathhappens.com/2019/11/04/think-pair-share/) for the most challenging problems in the handouts. For the easier problems, I’d probably have groups work on a few at a time, I’d circulate the room as they work, and if there are common errors, I’d go over those problems.
For some of the lessons in the curriculum that don’t have notes, they may be “Chromebook days” where I check out the Chromebook cart and have students watch tutorial videos as they work through the handouts. They’d mainly work individually, but I keep them in groups so they can get peer support when needed.
Do you have a particular lesson(s) in mind? I can go take a look and see if I remember how I handled it.
Thank you, Dane! The chunking post was very helpful. There aren’t any particular lessons I need to know about — just wanted to make sure I was interpreting correctly that it’s all meant to be groupwork.
I missed the first week of school because of Covid (breakthrough infection), so this is my first week trying to execute these lesson plans. So it’s very new for me and for the kids, but I’m definitely struggling with several classes. I expected some growing pains, but I’m also in a time crunch because DISD will only let me experiment for so long before they force me to use Guided Release because they think it improves scores. If you would ever have time, I would love to get coffee and pick your brain about your classroom philosophy and strategies for overcoming certain barriers. If not, maybe I can email you those questions.
Hopefully it doesn’t seem like I’m taking advantage of your generosity! I just want my kids to have the best instruction, and I need to grow a lot to give them that.
I’m Texas teacher and your page is amazing. I’m going to implement it in part this year and in full next year!!! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks so much, Kiara! I’m glad it’s been useful so far. Let me know when you find areas for improvement!
Hi Dane,
My name is Andy and I’m an Algebra/French Teacher in Alaska. Your website and course structure is well-organized and most importantly ENGAGING. Would you mind if used some of the pieces in creating my own school webpages and specific pieces as templates?
Hey Andy,
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it. You’re more than welcome to use anything on the site. I’m happy to share! My only ask is that everything remains free. Thanks for asking!
Thank you for sharing all of your resources! Sometimes I feel like I’m searching all over the place for different resources, so I love that you have warm-ups and concepts all in one place. Keep up the awesome work!
Thank you for the encouragement, Rachel! I’m glad the site has been useful. Feel free to send questions or feedback anytime!
Dane,
First of all, EXCELLENT website and curriculum. I greatly appreciate your dedication and hardwork you have put into all your lesson plans. I stumbled across it the end of last year while researching Dan Meyer’s 3 Act Tasks. I have been using your geometry curriculum to great effect. My kids have been greatly engaged and seem to be truly learning. I have also applaud your school for grading based on knowledge, not just test taking skills. I have applied the same kind of grading in my own classroom! I really want to thank you for helping me teach better lesson plans, especially as a newer teacher.
I do wonder, do you guys not teach any kind of piecewise functions in Algebra 1? Or go over absolute value functions/equations/inequalities? I am also teaching a remedial Algebra 1 class and have been looking for good lesson plans to help them have a better understanding.
Thanks a bunch,
Kevin Grogaard
Hey Kevin,
Thank you so much for the kind words! I really appreciate it. I’m happy to hear the site has been useful. Feel free to send feedback for improvement anytime as well!
In Texas, Algebra 1 does not include piecewise functions or absolute value functions. I believe we cover those things in Algebra 2. As for remedial Algebra 1, I’ve taught that many times, and I use most of the lessons on this site. The only difference is that I tend to spend a little more time on each concept to help solidify. This may lead to some concepts not getting enough time, so it’s important to spend the most time on the most heavily tested concepts in your state.
Hope that helps. Thanks again!
Dane, your site is absolutely terrific. The TEKS unfortunately encourage wide and shallow learning but you’ve done an masterful job in turning your curriculum into meaningful learning that encourage deep understandings. Thank you for your willingness to share. My colleague is teaching Algebra 2 next year and is interested in this style of teaching. Do you have any recommendations for places to look for Algebra 2 activities that incorporate the same style as you?
Paul,
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it!
For Algebra 2, New Visions has great content and a lot of curriculum already built out. Some blogs that have Algebra 2 content are Julie Reulbach, Dylan Kane, Sam Shah, and Jonathan Claydon.
Hope that helps!
Hello,
Thank you for this great resource. I noticed your answer key folder is empty except for day 126-138. Is there a place I can find them?
Thanks !
Hey Rus,
Thank you for the kind words! Hmm that’s strange. It may be a glitch. I just checked, and all the answer keys are showing up now. Let me know if you check again and still can’t see the rest.
Dane,
I see it now. It was a glitch on my end. Thanks again!
Hi Dane,
I’m teaching Algebra 1 this year and love your resources and concept quizzes. Out of curiosity, I noticed there is a large jump from the day 10 quiz to day 23 quiz. Is there any particular reason why the some of the content in between those days is not assessed?
Hey Kayleigh,
Thanks for the question and kind words! Here’s a detailed breakdown about why some concepts are quizzed and some aren’t. For the un-quizzed concepts between day 11 and 17, I decided that they were important, but not crucial enough to be included in the top 20ish concepts for Algebra 1. Solving One-Variable Inequalities was the toughest one to keep out. My reasoning for that one is that I’ve quizzed it in the past, and I had trouble finding ways to assess the inequality aspect at a high level. When I was grading, the solving equations portion of it ended up being the main focus. Therefore, I kept solving equations as a quizzed concept, but just decided to only spend a decent chunk of days teaching inequalities without formally assessing it.
Let me know if that helps!
Hi Dane!
First off…I LOVE your stuff. What you do with your concepts and instructional strategies are fantastic. I love the pacing and the outline of all the activities that you do. Last year my geometry PLC and I followed your timelines and addressed the same topics that you have listed. We pretty much followed it full-blown, with our twist on certain thing of course, and I must say it was a fantastic year. The kids learned so much….on a conceptual level, and retained it! We want to do the same thing this coming school year with Algebra. Couple questions….
Do you have other math teachers at your school that teach the same classes? Are you on a PLC? If so, do they do things the same way as you? Do you have to convince other teachers to do it the way you are? I’m curious what other math teachers in your building think about all this….We will have 7 different teachers teaching Algebra 1 next year and we are all supposed to use the same timelines, same assessments, same essential standards, etc. You can imagine this is difficult…
Do you feel like how you have algebra 1 right now is pretty solid? With the concepts and the pacing?
Also, do I noticed at the end of the year in Geometry you had probability lessons but no links.
We are starting the year next year in Algebra with a probability/statistics unit. Wondering if you had anything to share as far as probability goes and/or statistics? Keep up the great work! You inspire me.
-Jake
Hey Jake,
Thank you so much for the kind words! I’m really happy to hear that the curriculum has been useful.
I just sent you an email to answer your questions. Let me know if you received it. Looking forward to continuing the conversation.
Hi Dane,
I started the summer with a general search of SBG and came across your blog. I was overwhelmed at first, but have printed off each topic on SBG and feel like I’ve gotten a good understanding of what you are doing.
I teach Algebra 1 and am excited to use this new idea in the fall.
I am curious what your recent reply was to Jake concerning your feeling on how solid you felt the Algebra concepts and pacing were from last year.
Also, would there be any changes you would implement moving forward(retakes, faux quizzes, student analysis, etc)?
Hey Bailey,
I’m excited to hear that you’re diving into SBG! Feel free to ask questions any time.
As for the Algebra 1 curriculum, I feel very confident about the pacing and sequencing of the curriculum. Based on what I currently know about curriculum design, it’s as complete as I can make it.
Moving forward, I’m thinking about requiring all kids to retake their quiz the first time (if they don’t make a 100) and not necessarily require an analysis handout to be completed. However, I will basically force them to complete the analysis without technically requiring it because it’s so crucial to their learning. I do want kids to know that I want all of them to retake so they can witness their own growth. I don’t want to hinder the growth opportunity. It’ll be an interesting line to balance, but that’s what I’m reflecting on right now.
As for any retake after the 1st, those will definitely require an analysis handout and tutoring before offering the retake opportunity. The 2nd retake (or higher) is where students tend to try to work the system and do hail mary retakes.
Also, always go with your gut when you see things you would do differently in the curriculum. If problems need to be done in a different order, or there need to be more challenging problems, make those changes. None of this is fool proof!
Thanks for the comment!
Hi Dane,
I’m probably not seeing it but are there answer keys for the concept quizzes?
Hey Russ,
Thanks for asking. I actually don’t have answer keys for the quizzes. I thought about making and posting them at one point, but I was afraid of students getting a hold of them. Let me know if you want to compare answers on any specific quizzes though, and I’ll work through them.
Thank you Dane, that makes a lot of sense. Just wanted to check. Thank you again for everything here!
Hi Dane,
Just wanted to let you know I keep coming back to this blog each year…this I first visited about 4-5 years ago. Great stuff!
“which” not “this”, oops!
Hey Stephanie,
Thank you for the kind words! I really appreciate it and am glad the site has been useful. Feel free to send feedback for improvement any time!
Hi Dane,
I noticed that your notes don’t tend to include a list of steps for solving problems. I am an Algebra II teacher, and I have been working to change my teaching style to more of a instigator of group discussions and a facilitator of learning. Your resources and articles have given me a lot of ideas. Could you explain the reasoning behind not giving a list of steps? Do students tend to struggle at first without having a specific list of steps to follow? Thanks.
Hey Kim,
Great question! I think it’s just a personal preference thing, and it’s not necessarily based on research or anything.
I’m a bit of a minimalist, so I tend to keep handouts as clean as possible with as much room to write as possible. Therefore, one reason I don’t include steps is to save space and allow for more white space on the paper.
Also, it depends on the lesson, but sometimes I do display a list of steps for students to reference. For example, I displayed this when learning the quadratic formula.
However, when I displayed those slides, I did it before teaching the content because I wanted to give students the opportunity to analyze the steps silently first and discuss with their groups after the silent time. Kind of like a mini notice and wonder moment.
This tends to be the go to teacher move I use when learning how to solve problems that have repeatable steps. Give the kids the chance to notice and wonder a bit first, discuss with groups, and then I direct teach.
Also, there are times where I use silent solution videos to help as well.
Let me know if that answers your question!
May I have permission to link your website onto my google classroom site as an additional resource for my students next year? I teach Algebra 1 and have learned so much from you and your site.
Hey Carol,
Yes, you may link the website onto your Google Classroom. Thank you for asking, and thank you for the kind words!
Can I find material to work with probability? I haven´t found anything yet. Thanks
Thanks for asking, Lucas! I don’t have anything yet, but I’d check out New Visions’ unit. They have really good stuff.
https://curriculum.newvisions.org/math/course/algebra-ii/probability/
Hi!! I’m a second year teacher in Dallas ISD (it’s my first year teaching Algebra, I moved up with my kids) and Geoff Krall recommended your site to me when I asked him if he knew of anyone who made STAAR-aligned curriculum. I’m really excited to use your stuff, thank you so much for making it all available! I am wondering, when there is just a worksheet or spiral practice linked of the day’s work and no facilitation notes, would you typically have students working in groups on that? Is it always supposed to be groupwork unless explicitly noted otherwise?
Thanks,
Audrey
Hey Audrey! Great to hear from another Dallas area resident! Thank you for the kind words as well.
I prefer to always keep students in groups unless we are having a test or quiz. For lessons without facilitation notes, I’d still chunk the lesson (see this post: https://whenmathhappens.com/2019/12/06/chunking-the-lesson/) because I don’t like letting students work in groups all class without guidance.
In particular, I’d make sure to do the Think-Pair-Share routine (https://whenmathhappens.com/2019/11/04/think-pair-share/) for the most challenging problems in the handouts. For the easier problems, I’d probably have groups work on a few at a time, I’d circulate the room as they work, and if there are common errors, I’d go over those problems.
For some of the lessons in the curriculum that don’t have notes, they may be “Chromebook days” where I check out the Chromebook cart and have students watch tutorial videos as they work through the handouts. They’d mainly work individually, but I keep them in groups so they can get peer support when needed.
Do you have a particular lesson(s) in mind? I can go take a look and see if I remember how I handled it.
Thank you, Dane! The chunking post was very helpful. There aren’t any particular lessons I need to know about — just wanted to make sure I was interpreting correctly that it’s all meant to be groupwork.
I missed the first week of school because of Covid (breakthrough infection), so this is my first week trying to execute these lesson plans. So it’s very new for me and for the kids, but I’m definitely struggling with several classes. I expected some growing pains, but I’m also in a time crunch because DISD will only let me experiment for so long before they force me to use Guided Release because they think it improves scores. If you would ever have time, I would love to get coffee and pick your brain about your classroom philosophy and strategies for overcoming certain barriers. If not, maybe I can email you those questions.
Hopefully it doesn’t seem like I’m taking advantage of your generosity! I just want my kids to have the best instruction, and I need to grow a lot to give them that.