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Mathematics

Algebra 1 Is a Turning Point. Here鈥檚 How to Help Incoming 69传媒

A case study on getting kids ready for the gatekeeper math course
By Sarah Schwartz 鈥 June 22, 2021 9 min read
Illustration of a math student.
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Throughout the pandemic, data from testing has shown that students are struggling in math, making less progress than they might have in other years.

Teachers, too, have said that routines core to their instruction are much harder to do with virtual learners鈥攍ike showing lots of visual representations, working out problems collaboratively, and having structured student discussions about math concepts. Even with screensharing and digital math tools, they say, it鈥檚 not quite possible to recreate the kind of classroom setting where students can work with manipulatives, groups can collaborate on whiteboards, and teachers can evaluate understanding in real time.

69传媒 in all grades may require extra math support next year, but experts say this need is especially urgent in Algebra 1.

The course is often the first math class taken in high school, and it鈥檚 a gatekeeper to higher level mathematics that would prepare students for college study or careers in science, technology, engineering, or math. It鈥檚 also part of a student鈥檚 freshman grade point average, a signifier of whether they will graduate on time or not. Passing Algebra 1 is a graduation requirement in most states.

For this story, Education Week spoke with a dozen instructional experts, teachers, parents, and students about what students starting Algebra 1 next year need and how schools can support them. Representing their reflections and insights is 鈥淛ames,鈥 a composite student about to enter high school and start Algebra 1.

Where things stand for James

When the pandemic hit, James was in the spring of his 7th grade year. Math wasn鈥檛 his favorite subject, but there were parts of it he found satisfying鈥攍ike the moment when an understanding finally clicked into place after lots of examples and repetition. And he liked that math was a social subject, a class where it was not only allowed but encouraged for students to ask each other for help or bounce ideas off of one another.

He spent most of 8th grade in remote learning. Staring at the screen all day was hard. He would get headaches, and his phone was a constant distraction. Sometimes the Zoom feed would lag and he would miss parts of the math notes his teacher gave. The class moved a lot faster online than he was used to, with fewer opportunities to see his teacher work out example problems.

Asking questions was a drawn-out process. He鈥檇 have to stop the assignment, email the teacher, and wait for a response before he could keep going. If he were in a physical class, he might have turned to one of his peers for help. But it felt uncomfortable to do that online, when he didn鈥檛 know most of his classmates that well. Instead, he relied on math websites where he could plug in a problem or an equation and get the answer. He wasn鈥檛 failing, but he felt like he was barely keeping his head above water.

James鈥 school opened up for in-person in March 2021. When he came back to the building, his teacher quickly realized that he was struggling with a lot of skills she thought he had mastered鈥攕kills he would need to be successful in 9th grade, in Algebra 1. For example: At home, he鈥檇 relied on online tools to graph linear equations for him. He wasn鈥檛 sure how to do it by hand. And he struggled when asked to find all the positive and negative factor pairs for a number.

But he also had some deeper misunderstandings and unfinished learning around number sense. He was still a bit shaky with fractions and decimals: He might measure 7 inches on a ruler and note the value as 0.7 feet, rather than 7/12 of a foot. Presented with an equation like 陆x + 3 = 7, he knew to subtract 3 from both sides. But then he wasn鈥檛 always sure how to 鈥渦ndo鈥 the fraction.

In a normal 8th grade year, teachers said, they would take every opportunity to correct those misunderstandings in the moment and shore up students鈥 comfort鈥攏ot only with fractions and decimals, but exponents, radicals, and negative integers, too. Wendy Habeeb, an 8th grade math teacher at Salida Middle School in California, said that she is constantly plotting on a number line on the white board, so that students can see connections between different expressions of numbers鈥攖hat the square root of 64 is 8, which is the same as 16/2, for example.

鈥淗aving that ability to see relationships between numbers is what leads to success in Algebra 1,鈥 said Phil Murray, a high school math teacher at Early College Opportunities High School in Santa Fe, N.M.

But online, it was harder for teachers to do that kind of constant reinforcement, and harder for students to internalize it. Now that James is back in the classroom, asked to explain his thinking, he draws a blank. He鈥檚 hesitant to volunteer answers because he鈥檚 afraid they鈥檒l be wrong, and he doesn鈥檛 want to look like he鈥檚 farther behind than everyone else.

He鈥檚 nervous about starting Algebra 1. He鈥檚 already having a hard time keeping all the numbers and letters straight in his head, and he knows it鈥檚 only going to get more complicated from here. Next year also means the start of high school: a new group of students, new teachers, and the expectation, he worries, that he鈥檒l be able to handle more advanced work on his own. He doesn鈥檛 feel ready.

What algebra teachers can do

Even in a regular year, teachers say, students come into Algebra with varying degrees of readiness. But this year, the range might be even greater, depending on what opportunities and resources they had during remote learning. James has trouble with fractions, while another student might be fine with fractions but struggle with exponents. For that reason, teachers and experts recommend, lessons should start with checks for understanding.

Teachers can figure out what skills and understandings are prerequisites for the new concept they鈥檙e starting to introduce, and then give students a couple of questions that would allow them to show their knowledge鈥攐r demonstrate that they have unfinished learning. Then, teachers can develop a task or mini-lesson to shore up that prerequisite skill, and make explicit its connection to the new learning. For example, teachers could review the basics of linear functions and how to plot them on a graph right before introducing slope-intercept form.

Experts recommend this kind of targeted, just-in-time support instead of remediation (having James repeat entire units from 8th grade math before moving on to Algebra 1 content). Remediation can be demotivating, said Amy Getz, the interim director of K鈥12 education strategy, policy, and services at the University of Texas at Austin鈥檚 Charles A. Dana Center. It also can push students who are struggling further behind, by limiting their access to grade-level content, she said.

James鈥 teacher can show multiple representations for new concepts, something that James always found helpful in the classroom鈥攆or example, drawing explicit connections between the way a linear function looks written as a mathematical expression, the way it looks as a graph, and real-world examples James might encounter. Teachers can also be explicit about the connections between word problems and the equations meant to solve them, teaching solution methods for different types of problems.

And the number line that Habeeb, the California middle school teacher, uses doesn鈥檛 have to stay in 8th grade: Algebra teachers can continue to plot radicals, exponents, and fractions if students are having a hard time conceptualizing their magnitude. For example: The idea that the square root of 16 is the same as 4 is the same as 2 squared can feel really abstract to students, said Sheng Lor, another 8th grade math teacher who works with Habeeb. But when she plots numbers like these at the same point on a number line, she said, 鈥渋t was a like a switch in their head.鈥

Next comes practice, practice, practice, teachers say鈥攐pportunities to build fluency and confidence that students might not have had while learning remotely. Group practice, specifically, also allows teachers to listen to students鈥 thought processes. James鈥 teacher could listen in to his group conversation鈥攁sking guiding questions to explore his thinking, reinforcing his use of mathematical language, and addressing any misunderstandings in the moment.

But teachers will also have to get students comfortable having these kinds of group discussions again鈥攊mportant for students in all grades, but crucial for incoming 9th graders who may not know their classmates. Lor said that comfort level doesn鈥檛 just happen. She had to intentionally set aside time for students to develop relationships. This spring, she had some additional time with her math students due to state testing schedules. She chose to spend part of it just talking鈥攈aving students share what they were doing over the weekends, for example.

It was a tough choice, deciding to chat instead of squeezing in one more math problem, because Lor knew that these students had already missed so much learning time. But it paid off: Her students were quicker to participate in turn-and-talks during the short time left in the school year.

High school math teachers鈥攚ho might not usually spend as much time outlining classroom norms as their middle school counterparts鈥攃ould spend more time on that this year, Getz said. 鈥淵ou model for the students how you can ask questions to try to understand someone鈥檚 reasoning, making it really clear that getting a wrong answer can sometimes be a really important step in the learning process.鈥

Insights for all teachers

Teachers, experts, parents, and students focused on two big takeaways. First, in math, all of this focus on relationship building and social-emotional learning isn鈥檛 an extra, teachers say. It鈥檚 integral to students鈥 academic success.

If students don鈥檛 feel comfortable saying they don鈥檛 understand, if they aren鈥檛 willing to tackle a challenging problem or share their ideas in a group, then they won鈥檛 be able to get the practice they need to achieve fluency, or ask the questions that can lead to deep conceptual understanding.

鈥淎ll the time I would [have liked] to ask a question, but I was afraid of what was going to happen,鈥 said Camrynn Smith, a rising 9th grader in Salida, Calif., about remote learning. She was nervous about calling attention to herself by typing into the chat box. And she thinks that it might take her a while to get back in the headspace where she feels comfortable asking questions again.

鈥淏e patient,鈥 Smith advised teachers. 鈥淪ometimes it鈥檚 really hard getting back into the groove of things.鈥

But getting back into the groove doesn鈥檛 have to mean easing off the challenge. Which leads to the second point: Give all students access to grade-level content. Helping students master challenging work with appropriate support keeps them on track, so that they鈥檙e prepared for higher level math and can succeed in the courses they need for graduation. And it can also build their confidence.

鈥淚鈥檓 waiting for that 鈥榓ha鈥 moment when she鈥檚 actually excited about the fact that she鈥檚 getting it,鈥 said Christina Laster, a Palm Springs, Calif., parent of a rising 10th grader who was in Algebra 1 this past year. 鈥淚 hope that it鈥檚 not as emotionally draining.鈥

Education Week spoke with 12 instructional experts, teachers, parents, and students for this story. They are, in alphabetical order: Stephanie Case, parent in Dansville, Mich.; Shelbi Cole, senior math specialist with Student Achievement Partners; Amy Getz, interim director of K鈥12 education strategy, policy, and services at the University of Texas at Austin鈥檚 Charles A. Dana Center; Wendy Habeeb, 8th grade math teacher at Salida Middle School in Salida, Calif.; Christina Laster, parent in Palm Springs, Calif.; Sheng Lor, 8th grade math teacher at Salida Middle School in Salida, Calif.; Bushra Makiya, middle school math teacher at The Leadership and Community Service Academy in New York City; Phil Murray, high school math teacher at Early College Opportunities High School in Santa Fe, N.M.; Camrynn Smith, 8th grader in Salida, Calif.; Holly Smith, parent in Salida, Calif.; Noah Starkey, 8th grader in Dansville, Mich.; Tara Warren, 7th and 8th grade math teacher at John Adams Middle School in Santa Monica, Calif.

Documents consulted include: , Achieve the Core; (May 8, 2021), Instruction Partners; , IES What Works Clearinghouse.

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