Colleges

A new approach to college access and completion

Colleges can participate in Excel Together New Mexico in two different ways:

  • articulate our Core Strategies for Mathematics (CSM) course as Credit for Prior Learning (CPL) for Math 1130 -- Survey of Mathematics
  • use CSM internally as Math 1130 curriculum

As described below, CSM uses new forms of adaptive, personalized learning that will make college math more accessible for many students. In addition, CSM's CPL has instructiional and bureaucratic advantages that:

  • make college math accessible to most high school students, as opposed to the about 10% who now access college math through dual credit
  • provide the benefits of college math credit not only to high schools, but unlike dual credit, it will be available to non-school, non-traditional individuals as well through adult education, workforce development, employee tuition assistance, and other programs.

CSM is free for all New Mexicans through 2026
(and we're working on forever!)

CSM develops math and High Performance

Excel Together New Mexico introduces the online, self-paced Core Strategies for Mathematics (CSM) course where a student can learn college-level quantitative reasoning and information literacy while building High Performance skills including:

  • problem-solving mindsets and strategies
  • learning strategies, mindsets, and the ability to learn on your own
  • intention to excel, supported by attention to detail and persistence
  • and, most importantly, self-efficacy -- a person's belief in their ability to succeed at whatever they put their mind to.

These High Performance skills form the basis for success in school, college, work and life.

Self-efficacy, in particular, now enjoys a consensus in educational psychology and organizational development as the single most important factor in performance, both in work and academic contexts. Why?Knowing you can succeed leads to persistence (why be persistent if there's only failure at the end?), and persistence to learning and problem solving, which in turn leads to accelerated acquisition of academic skills.

Evidence for CSM math instruction

A national study of educational technology with mainly young, disengaged high school dropouts found that CSM had the largest math and literacy gains compared to gold-standard programs like ALEKS from McGraw-Hill and MyMathLab from Pearson.

Most educational technology increases the skills gap, because it allows advanced students to accelerate while struggling students fall further behind -- see, for example, the Pearson results below where the baseline is classroom instruction). With CSM, the online participants did far better than those in classroom instruction. Furthermore, the effect size in math was 0.5, which translates in college math to roughly a full year improvement in math per semester of instruction.

As a math course, how does CSM improve literacy?

Students are learning math through a self-paced course where the only instruction is written. Unlike a typical math text, every skill in CSM has 3-6 different types of lessons at different reading levels: short step-by-steps, worked out examples, longer concepts. As students are working on CSM, they're also spending a lot of time in informational text.

How colleges use CSM

As Credit for Prior Learning

CSM has a recommendation from the American Council on Education for 3 semester hours of quantitative reasoning at the baccalaureate level, and colleges with over 500,000 students accept CSM as math Credit for Prior Learning (CPL).

CSM's CPL credit has two major advantages for colleges over the popular dual credit strategy:

  • High Schools and traditional student pathways -- most colleges want evidence that students can complete the dual-credit class, and so there are eligibility requirements (most frequently, meeting some GPA or SAT/ACT threshold), resulting in only a small fraction of students in New MExico earning dual-credit college math. CSM incorporates deep remediation to 5th grade math, and develops general academic success skills, so that most high school students can, within a semester, complete CSM, with potential effects many-fold that of duial credit jath classes.
  • Non-traditional student pathways -- dual credit is simply a high school strategy, whereas CSM's CPL process can be easily implemented in adult education, workforce develoment, and CBO programs.

As a math curriculum

The University of the District of Columbia Community College (UDC-CC) uses CSM as the curriculum for the general education math course IGED 120, after which paswsing rates soared from less than 50% to over 85%. Moreover, not only did student engagement jump, but instructor morale did as well.

College implementation of CSM

Articulation of the CSM Certificate for college credit

CSM has a recommendation from the American Council on Education (ACE) for 3 semester hours of quantitative reasoning at the baccalaureate level. CSM is currently articulated for credit at colleges (both 2- and 4-year) with over 500,000 students.

A CSM syllabus is available here to help find an equivalent course at your college -- CNM faculty performed an equivalency versus Math 1130 -- Survey of Mathematics as part of their articulation evaluation.If you need additional material, presentations, free registrations, please don't hesitate to ask.

After articulation, either Excel Together New Mexico and/or your college can reach out to your feeder districts to encourage them to consider CSM as a high school math course. NMPED has approved CSM as a high school math course and provided a STARS code (2096 - Independent Study/CSM) for its use.

Once a school/district has decided to provide the course, Excel Together NM will provide free professional development for district math teachers at no cost.

As an internal Math 1130 or other math curriculum

CSM is free for 2026, and hopefully forever

If you elect to use CSM as a math curriculum, CSM will provide free professional development to your instructors, and we will be providing a New Mexico Community of Practice in which your instructors can participate.

Excel Together NM is providing CSM for free to all New Mexicans, whether in high school, college, adult education, workforce develoment or otherwise.

What is "college and career readiness"?

What is college and career readiness

SeeMore Impact Labs conducted a survey of school district superintendent and college president members of the College and Career Readiness Commission of the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC) and The School Superintendents Association (AASA). They were asked:

  • How important are the following factors for the education, work and life success of your students? (shown in green)
  • From school and college, how well prepared are students for these factors? (shown in blue)

How important (GREEN): From their responses, the college-prep math and literacy that are the primary accountability focus of schools has by far the least importance. The most important factors are personal characteristics like self-efficacy (your deep-seated belief in your ability to succeed at what you put your mind to), persistence and attention-to-detail. In a survey of members of the West Virginia Manufacturers Association, employers indicated that the factors identified here are very similar to the factors that they value most in employees, with their most important factor being independent learning and the next highest attention-to-detail.

How prepared (BLUE): From their responses, there is an acknowledgement that schools and colleges don't prepare students with the most important factors -- indeed, other than college-prep math and literacy, the more important a factor is, the less well schools and colleges prepare students in that factor. And most of these factors identified as being important are largely overlooked in West Virginia's college and career readiness curriculum and accountability.

"The unanimous feelings of the math teachers involved in the program is that students are learning in ways they haven’t before.  ...CSM is extremely exciting to me in its potential role in building not only the math skills of students, but also their general interest in academic work, and their ability to learn.  I see broad use of CSM within this [struggling high school] population."

Please click to read more about Haidee's experience with CSM

"How could you ask for a better outcome? So many programs out there promise improved learning outcomes and rarely deliver results. From our point of view as educators and administrators, the CSM program not only delivers excellent outcomes, it gives us the opportunity to have these ongoing small teachable moments with students to help strengthen their basis skills and reasoning abilities."

Click here to learn more about Kim and Sara's experience with CSM

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