RESOURCES
Math Medic Core
These resources from Math Medic are designed to save you time while sparking your students’ curiosity.
The Rights of the Learner: Building Confidence and Equity in an EFFL Classroom
Karen Sleno shows us how to create an environment where taking risks is encouraged and where everyone’s voice has value.
Statistics and Technology: From the Past to the Future
As technology continues to evolve, the question of what we should be teaching becomes increasingly important.
When Am I Ever Going To Use This? – Part 2
When students ask “When Am I Ever Going To Use This?”, instead of focusing only on the content, look at everyday skills the lesson teaches.
4 Lessons We Learned While Substitute Teaching
Lindsey and Sarah reflect on their experience substitute teaching.
Does Geometry Have Room for Statistics?
Less than 1 in 4 students take a high school statistics class. How can we ensure that every high school students learns statistics?
3 Review Tests = 1 AP Exam: An AP Exam Prep Strategy
After many years of reviewing for the AP Exam, AP Stats all-star teacher Jeff Eicher has figured out the best way to structure the review.
Why We Should Embrace Inefficiency
When we talk with other teachers, the prevailing themes of our conversations are the desire to teach our students well–and by that we…
5 Tips for Teaching Volume of Solids of Revolution
How to help students solve volume problems flexibly, fluently, and confidently.
A Statistics Final for a Pandemic (or any other time)
Ho: A Final Exam should assess content understanding.
Ha: A Final Exam should assess content understanding and allow students to reflect.
Strategies for Engaging Students in the Math Medic Review Course
Use the “Discussion” and “Notes” features in the Stats Medic AP Exam Review Course to get students interacting with you and other students.
Reframing Mistakes in the Math Classroom
One of the greatest challenges of teaching (and what makes it so exhausting) is responding to student ideas in real time. Student contributions can be complex, nuanced, incomplete, incorrect, or hard to comprehend. We do our best to plan for the lesson by anticipating student responses, but the great work of teaching is responding to…
How to Reduce Cheating for Online Assessments
In this blog post you will find an activity that you can do with your students to help them better understand the consequences of cheating.