ParaPro math section is harder than I expected — anyone else struggle with the algebra?
I'm a current classroom aide applying for a Title I paraprofessional position and the district requires a passing ParaPro score. I took a diagnostic last week and I'm sitting at about 65% overall, which is below the 464 scaled score most districts use as a cutoff. My reading score is strong but the math section is dragging me down, especially the algebraic operations questions.
I've been using a ParaPro assessment practice test to identify which math areas need the most work, and it's pretty clear I'm weak on multi-step word problems and anything involving inequalities. The number and operations section — fractions, decimals, ratios — is fine, but once it gets into pattern recognition and algebraic thinking I start dropping points fast.
My plan is 5 weeks of focused prep, about 90 minutes a day, with the majority of time on math. The test is 90 questions total — 30 each in reading, math, and writing — and you have 2.5 hours. That's actually pretty generous time-wise, so I don't think pacing is the issue. It's purely content knowledge in algebra that's holding me back. Any suggestions on how to close a 15–20 point gap in 5 weeks?
Algebraic thinking on the ParaPro isn't deep algebra — it's more about identifying patterns and understanding what an equation is saying in plain language. Khan Academy's algebra basics course covers exactly the right level. I closed about a 12-point gap in 3 weeks focusing only on that section.
Multi-step word problems are almost always about setting up the equation correctly before you solve. Practice translating word sentences into math expressions until it's fast. That skill transfers to probably 40% of the algebraic questions on the exam.
I passed with a 472 after studying for 6 weeks. The writing section surprised me — it's grammar and usage, not an essay, so don't neglect it. I picked up 8 points there just by reviewing subject-verb agreement and pronoun reference rules.
90 minutes a day for 5 weeks is solid if you stick to it. The biggest trap is doing practice questions without reviewing why wrong answers are wrong. Spend at least 30 of your 90 minutes on answer analysis rather than just grinding through more questions.