Get Close Support for Your Algebra Teachers
Algebra is a gateway course, serving as a prerequisite to advanced math and science courses. It’s also the most frequently taken math course in high school and is required for college admission.

Ready to Teach Algebra has been developed and tested over the past year and will be offered in its entirety for the first time beginning in the fall. This unique online professional development program is built around ten major themes (see “RTT Algebra Modules,” page 5) presented in today’s popular algebra texts and aligns with the sequence of a typical algebra curriculum. This alignment is a hallmark of our Close Support approach.
Close Support connects professional development activities quickly and directly to the teacher’s classroom experience by providing off-the-shelf customization; research-based content in core math concepts and pedagogy; interactives that offer parallel teacher and student activities; insights into student thinking; and learning communities of facilitated discussion forums.
Each three-week course module provides opportunities for teachers to reflect on their own learning and to identify obstacles to learning and misunderstandings through dynamic discussions with peers that support the continuous and sustained learning experience. In the first week of each module, the core algebra topic is introduced – often with an RTT Interactive (a small manipulable Java applet that is cross-platform and runs over the Internet) – to ensure that the participating teacher has a solid conceptual understanding of the math. In the second week, the teacher has an opportunity to explore student understanding of the math concept by analyzing video vignettes of classroom students and expert commentary on how students learn. Finally, the third week links teacher and student understanding to the local curriculum and presents suggestions that support the teachers in integrating course elements into their instruction.
The modular online course structure allows schools, districts, states, and even colleges and universities to offer customized sequences of the modules to best meet local needs. The sequence can be adjusted easily for schedule and length. Licensees have the option of using their own facilitators or PBS TeacherLine’s professionally trained mathematics facilitators to lead the courses. Upon request, PBS TeacherLine can provide specialized facilitator training. Ready to Teach Algebra can also be used in pre-service teacher education programs as a component of middle or high school mathematics methods courses.
If you’re ready to participate or are interested
in more information about Ready to Teach Algebra professional development opportunities, please
contact Raymond Rose (ray@concord.org) or Beryl Jackson (bjackson@pbs.org)
to discuss your specific needs. ![]()
Participants from the Pilot Study say:
- The activities are great... they really make you re-examine the way you teach the topics in your own classes. Things like the Qualitative Grapher interactive have exciting implications for use in the classroom. The opportunity to interact with so many colleagues on a regular basis is invaluable.
- I am a better mathematics teacher because of the two modules we did.
- The course presented some basic core concepts in a very hands-on, productive way. I love the stuff.
- The course really helped me to be more aware of potential areas of student misunderstanding, and helped my teaching as I was taking the course.
Article Links & Notes
Seeing Math – http://seeingmath.concord.orgPBS TeacherLine – http://teacherline.pbs.org
Ready to Teach – http://rtt.concord.org
RTT Interactives – http://rtt.concord.org/interactives
Got a Plan?

The Problem
Three cellular phone companies are offering promotions for new customers that are represented in the graph at right.
Three users with different profiles – an attorney calling her assistant and clients from the courthouse; a retired pediatrician who makes long-distance calls to his grandchildren on weekdays; a high school math teacher who keeps in touch with her daughter’s nanny during free periods and makes occasional calls to schedule appointments – each want to purchase a cell phone. They are each trying to decide which plan suits their individual needs.
Your Role in the Story
You are a customer service representative for Cell Zone, a company that produces reports on cellular phone companies and helps customers choose plans that fit their needs and lifestyles.
Your Task
As the customer service representative, you will make
preliminary recommendations to your three customers. Use as many tools as
you need to reach each decision and make your recommendations clear to each
of your customers. Include any decisions you reach as to what plan or plans
might be best suited to each of them and the conditions under which each
customer might find the plan or plans most useful.![]()
RTT Algebra Modules
OverviewParticipants learn to navigate the online course environment as they meet fellow teachers through personal web pages and online discussions. They examine obstacles to interpreting time vs. distance graphs and try out the first interactive, the RTT Qualitative Grapher. Through these activities, they examine the nature of algebra, assumptions underlying their own understanding, and approaches used in their students’ curriculum.Professional Development Goals
Ratio, Proportion, and ScaleThis module prepares the transition from a primary focus on arithmetic and skills with algorithms (typical of elementary and middle school) to a focus on algebra, where students use multiplicative, as well as additive, thinking. The common terms – ratio, proportion, and scale – are placed within the broader mathematical themes needed in algebra.Professional Development Goals
Linear FunctionsThe Linear Functions module introduces algebra through the mathematically cohesive concept of functions and grounds it by modeling real-life situations.Professional Development Goals
Transformations of Linear FunctionsParticipants observe relationships between graphic and symbolic forms of a function. They explore how changes to the graphic representation of a function alter its symbolic representation, and vice versa.Professional Development Goals
Linear EquationsMost algebra curricula introduce linear equations before linear functions. In this module functions are discussed first, showing an equation as a particular instance of a function.Professional Development Goals
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Quadratic FunctionsUsing models and problem solving, participants examine how the general nature of quadratic functions informs the particular instances described by quadratic equations. Participants also use multiple representations – tables, graphs, and equations – as powerful tools to describe physical situations.Professional Development Goals
Transformations of Quadratic FunctionsUsing interactives, participants observe how changing symbolic expressions alters their graphic representation, and vice versa. By working with families of quadratic functions, they deepen their understanding of the role of each symbolic form in gleaning information about a function.Professional Development Goals
Quadratic EquationsThis module makes explicit the relationship between quadratic functions and quadratic equations. Because textbooks and tests devote a great deal of time to the skills of factoring and finding roots, participants also use graphical means, as well as successive approximations in tabular form, to reach the same goal.Professional Development Goals
Descriptive StatisticsThis module discusses data sets, measures of center (mean, median, mode), range and outliers, and linear fits to data sets. Research suggests that when students calculate a measure of center, they use algorithms without associating the measurement with a characterization of the entire aggregate.Professional Development Goals
ProjectThis module provides a framework for project design and a set of rubrics to assess those who are taking the course for credit. It consolidates Ready to Teach concepts, participants’ understanding of algebra, and their philosophies about teaching practice. Participants say farewell to their coursemates and facilitator in a brief graduation “speech.” They also compose a concrete plan for using new insights in their own thinking and teaching, and learn from the plans of colleagues. |
Article Links & Notes
Seeing Math – http://seeingmath.concord.orgPBS TeacherLine – http://teacherline.pbs.org
Ready to Teach – http://rtt.concord.org
RTT Interactives – http://rtt.concord.org/interactives
