Pre-algebra lessons during the school year are usually one hour 2 or 3 times a week from Monday to Thursday and/or 1.5 hours on Saturday morning. Some lessons are longer if you are preparing for an exam for the following week. Primarily during the week, I will prepare you for the next lessons until I meet with you again. On the weekend, I prepare students for the upcoming week or for upcoming exams. Most students come to 2 or 3 lessons a week. Some students attend more lessons as the math gets harder to understand.
Lee Academics pre-algebra Prep Course includes:
- Up to 3 1-hour or 1.5 hours instructional lessons a week (some weeks may be up to 4 lessons as needed)
- Many practice exams/materials from Lee Academics resources for your current pre-algebra book or other pre-algebra resources to complement concepts taught in your book. These are worked on before or after your instructional lesson. I will go over your mistakes.
- Strategies for doing pre-algebra problems faster, allowing more time to do hard pre-algebra problems on tests
- Benchmark preparation
Lee Academics pre-algebra Prep Course will cover:
- Current pre-algebra chapter/lessons at school during the week days
- Work ahead to cover future pre-algebra lessons within the chapter during the weekends or working on the next chapter after a chapter exam during the week.
- Past pre-algebra chapters during the weekends are necessary to understand the current chapter
- Pre-algebra from other text books – The Springboard pre-algebra books is not as comprehensive as a traditional pre-algebra book. Students using these books will not learn a full year of traditional pre-algebra. It will be difficult to move into the algebra 1 book without full pre-algebra knowledge. Some pre-algebra concepts are critical for success in algebra 1.
- Some pre-algebra concepts are essential foundational skills for high school math. These concepts will be emphasized at lessons.
Pre-algebra topics emphasized for mastery as foundational for algebra 1 and geometry:
- Equations, inequalities
- Direct variation – taught in every high school math book
- Linear functions
- Exponents and radicals – including cube and 4th roots
- Solving systems of equations (in Springboard Common Core 3 and pre-algebra) – very important for higher math
- Sequences and patterns
- Geometry unit in pre-algebra – Some pre-algebra teachers skip this unit. The SAT exam contains 10% geometry, ACT 20%, some geometry is necessary for algebra 1, algebra 2, precalculus and calculus.
- Probability and data analysis – There are probability and data analysis units in many common core books, including some precalculus books.