I teach 9th grade math in New York and my passing rate on the Algebra Regents has been frustrating me. Last year 61% of my students passed which is technically fine but I know several of them could have done better with different prep strategies.
The polynomial and function transformation questions seem to be where most students lose points. I see them understand the concepts in class but then freeze on the exam format. It's the multi-step application problems that get them, not the basic skill questions.
I've been building my own practice test bank but it takes forever and the quality is inconsistent. Has anyone found a good supplementary resource specifically for Algebra Regents that students can work through independently? Preferably something that mirrors the actual exam format.
Also curious if other teachers are seeing improvement from the new curriculum alignment or if it's making prep harder to target.
My passing rate jumped from 64% to 79% when I started doing one full timed practice exam per month starting in October. Students need to experience the exam conditions, not just the content. Format familiarity matters as much as math knowledge.
The new curriculum alignment has made some things easier but harder in others because there's less time to spiral review. I've been supplementing with targeted spiral quizzes every 2 weeks to compensate.
The multi-step application problems are always the differentiator. I spend an extra week specifically on problem decomposition — teaching students to identify what each part of the question is asking before solving. That alone moved my scores noticeably.
Jmap.org has a solid free Regents archive with answer keys. Not fancy but it's actual past exams which is exactly what students need. I assign specific past exams as homework and review the wrong answers in class the next day.