Word: algebraical
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...college students invaded Mississippi to fight nonviolently for civil rights. But Moses was also a math teacher, and that combination of callings helps explain what he has since become. Every Monday during the school year, Moses leaves his home in Cambridge, Mass., and flies?to Jackson, Miss., to teach algebra at all-black Lanier High School. Moses, 66,?is determined to make mathematical literacy as much a battle cry as voting rights were 40 years ago. He wants to overthrow what he calls "sharecropper education" by helping all students master algebra, preferably by the eighth grade, so they are ready...
...Moses has leveraged his ideas by training other teachers to apply them. His organization, the Algebra Project, born 19 years ago, is based on ideas he developed while helping his children learn to solve math problems. Today the project, which has its headquarters in Cambridge, has trained more than 500 teachers and reaches 10,000 children in 31 school districts. His approach seems to work. At Lanier, Algebra Project students have typically scored from 12 to 15 points higher (on a scale of 100) than the school average on statewide algebra tests. "He's getting the kids to believe they...
...college students invaded Mississippi to fight nonviolently for civil rights. But Moses was also a math teacher, and that combination of callings helps explain what he has since become. Every Monday during the school year, Moses leaves his home in Cambridge, Mass., and flies to Jackson, Miss., to teach algebra at all-black Lanier High School. Moses, 66, is determined to make mathematical literacy as much a battle cry as voting rights were 40 years ago. He wants to overthrow what he calls "sharecropper education" by helping all students master algebra, preferably by the eighth grade, so they are ready...
Moses has leveraged his ideas by training other teachers to apply them. His organization, the Algebra Project, born 19 years ago, is based on ideas he developed while helping his children learn to solve math problems. Today the project, which has its headquarters in Cambridge, has trained more than 500 teachers and reaches 10,000 children in 31 school districts. His approach seems to work. At Lanier, Algebra Project students have typically scored from 12 to 15 points higher (on a scale of 100) than the school average on statewide algebra tests. "He's getting the kids to believe they...
...news for something AHMED AL-ABBADI Jordanian M.P. bites off part of rival politician's ear in a parliamentary brawl. MORGAN PRESSEL Twelve-year-old golfer is youngest ever to qualify for the U.S. Women's Open. Maybe this will impress that totally hot guy in pre-algebra...