Middle School Mastery
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Finally understand every subject — one clear step at a time

A clear, confidence-building school that walks 6th–8th graders through every core subject — Math, ELA, Science, and Social Studies — one concept at a time. No confusion, no overwhelm: just the essential skills that unlock better grades and real understanding.

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Middle School Mastery

Confusion in middle school is almost never about intelligence — it's about one missing piece, and that's exactly what we go back and fix.Jordan Green

What you'll learn

What you'll be able to do

  • Solve multi-step math problems involving fractions, percentages, slope, and linear equations with consistent accuracy
  • Read any text and pull out the main idea, theme, author's purpose, and supporting evidence like a pro
  • Write a structured five-paragraph essay or CER response with a clear thesis and cited textual evidence
  • Explain core science concepts — from cell biology and genetics to Newton's Laws and the water cycle — in your own words
  • Analyze historical events like the American Revolution and the fall of Rome using primary sources and critical thinking
  • Walk into any middle school test feeling prepared, organized, and genuinely confident across all four core subjects

How it works

A school that adapts to you

This isn't a set of static videos. Every lesson is generated live and tuned to where you actually are.

We learn your level

A quick placement check tailors your starting point so you're never bored or lost.

Lessons adapt as you go

Each lesson is written for your pace and your goal, adjusting as your skills grow.

Your AI coach keeps you moving

Checkpoints, feedback, and gentle nudges turn progress into a real result.

The curriculum

What's inside your school

7 modules · 41 lessons

1

Math: Fractions, Ratios & Percents

Builds the foundational number sense students need before tackling algebra. Fractions are introduced first because ratio and percent work both depend on fluent fraction manipulation. Percent Change is moved here from its original mid-algebra placement so all percent work is consolidated and sequenced logically.

  • 1.1Adding & Subtracting Fractions with Unlike DenominatorsIncluded
  • 1.2Multiplying & Dividing FractionsIncluded
  • 1.3Ratios and ProportionsIncluded
  • 1.4Percent of a NumberIncluded
  • 1.5Percent ChangeIncluded
2

Math: Negative Numbers, Operations & Expressions

Transitions students from pure number sense to the symbolic language of algebra. Negative numbers and order of operations come first because they are prerequisites for writing and simplifying expressions. Scientific Notation is repositioned here (rather than near Functions) since it is an extension of place value and exponent concepts, not a linear-equations topic.

  • 2.1Negative Numbers on a Number LineIncluded
  • 2.2Order of OperationsIncluded
  • 2.3Distributive PropertyIncluded
  • 2.4Combining Like TermsIncluded
  • 2.5Scientific NotationIncluded
3

Math: Equations, Slope & Linear Functions

Applies all prior skills to formal algebraic reasoning, building from one-step equations up through systems and functions. Each lesson is a stepping stone: students must solve one-step before two-step, understand proportional relationships before slope, and master slope before graphing lines or solving systems. Pythagorean Theorem and Functions serve as capstone lessons connecting algebra to geometry and the broader concept of mathematical relationships.

  • 3.1One-Step EquationsIncluded
  • 3.2Two-Step EquationsIncluded
  • 3.3Proportional RelationshipsIncluded
  • 3.4SlopeIncluded
  • 3.5Slope-Intercept FormIncluded
  • 3.6Systems of EquationsIncluded
  • 3.7Pythagorean TheoremIncluded
  • 3.8FunctionsIncluded
4

ELA: Reading & Comprehension Skills

Sequences reading skills from foundational word-level strategies (context clues) up through text-level analysis (comparing two texts), mirroring the cognitive demand level at each stage. Point of View and Author's Purpose are moved earlier in the sequence because they are analytical lenses students need WHILE reading — before they are asked to summarise or compare. Inference is placed after Context Clues since both involve reading between the lines at different scales.

  • 4.1Context CluesIncluded
  • 4.2Main Idea vs. ThemeIncluded
  • 4.3Point of ViewIncluded
  • 4.4Author's PurposeIncluded
  • 4.5Figurative LanguageIncluded
  • 4.6InferenceIncluded
  • 4.7SummarizingIncluded
  • 4.8Comparing Two TextsIncluded
5

ELA: Writing Skills

Sequences writing instruction from the sentence-level skill of citing evidence through the paragraph-level CER framework to the full five-paragraph essay, with thesis statement taught as an explicit prerequisite before the essay is drafted. This order ensures students always have the tools they need before they are asked to use them in a larger structure.

  • 5.1Citing EvidenceIncluded
  • 5.2Thesis StatementIncluded
  • 5.3CER WritingIncluded
  • 5.4Five-Paragraph EssayIncluded
6

Science: Life Science & Physical Science

Reorganises the science content so topics build on each other: cell biology comes first (the smallest unit of life), then ecosystems (how living things interact at scale), then genetics (how traits are passed between organisms — logically follows cell biology). Physical science topics (Newton's Laws and physical vs. chemical change) are grouped at the end. Water Cycle is repositioned after Ecosystems because water is a key component of ecosystem function, making the connection explicit. A new prerequisite lesson on the scientific method anchors the module and supports the target outcome of explaining concepts 'in your own words.'

  • 6.1The Scientific Method & Scientific ThinkingIncluded
  • 6.2Plant vs. Animal CellsIncluded
  • 6.3EcosystemsIncluded
  • 6.4Water CycleIncluded
  • 6.5Genetics & Punnett SquaresIncluded
  • 6.6Newton's Three Laws of MotionIncluded
  • 6.7Physical vs. Chemical ChangeIncluded
7

Social Studies: History & Government

Resequences lessons so Primary Sources comes first as a critical-thinking and research-skills prerequisite — students need to know how to read and evaluate a primary source before they are asked to use one. Chronological history (Rome, then American Revolution) follows, and Three Branches of Government closes the module as it directly connects the outcome of the American Revolution to the government structure that resulted.

  • 7.1Primary SourcesIncluded
  • 7.2Why Rome FellIncluded
  • 7.3American RevolutionIncluded
  • 7.4Three Branches of GovernmentIncluded

Who it's for

Is this you?

The Struggling Student

Feels behind in one or more subjects and needs a patient, judgment-free place to go back, fill in the gaps, and finally feel caught up.

The Worried Parent

Wants a structured, affordable supplement to classroom learning that actually explains things the way their kid can understand.

The Test-Anxious Tween

Knows the material sort of — but freezes on tests and needs the organized, concept-by-concept practice that builds real confidence.

The New-to-Algebra Student

Just hit 7th or 8th grade math and needs fractions, negative numbers, and equations explained step by step before the bigger stuff kicks in.

The Reluctant Reader

Struggles to find the main idea, write a thesis, or cite evidence — and needs ELA skills broken down into clear, doable steps.

The Homeschool Family

Looking for a complete, curriculum-aligned middle school supplement that covers all four core subjects in one organized, easy-to-follow place.

Questions

Frequently asked

Your teacher

A note from your teacher

Jordan Green

Jordan Green

Hey — if you're a parent reading this, I already know what you're feeling. Your kid comes home, sits down to do homework, and within ten minutes the table looks like a disaster zone of crossed-out numbers and half-erased sentences. They're frustrated. You're frustrated. And the teacher has 30 other students to get to, so there's no time to go back and re-explain the one thing your child missed three weeks ago that's making everything since then feel impossible.

I built Middle School Mastery because middle school is the make-or-break moment for academic confidence. It's where math stops being friendly and starts introducing negative numbers, slope, and equations. It's where teachers expect you to write a thesis and cite evidence like you were born knowing how. And it's where a lot of kids quietly decide they're just "not a math person" or "not a good writer" — when really, they just needed one patient explanation they never got.

Every single lesson in this school is built around one goal: make it click. We don't pile on ten concepts at once. We don't assume you remember something from two grades ago. We take one idea — say, the distributive property, or how to find the main idea of a passage, or why Rome actually fell — and we explain it the way a great tutor would. Clearly. With real-life examples. With a little humor so your brain doesn't check out. And we don't move on until it makes sense.

Here's what I want you to know: confusion in middle school is almost never about intelligence. It's about gaps. One missing piece — like not quite understanding what a ratio is — can make everything built on top of it feel impossible. This curriculum is designed to find those gaps and fill them in, one concept at a time, across Math, ELA, Science, and Social Studies.

Whether your student is trying to catch up after a rough semester, keep pace with a class that moves fast, or just get a stronger foundation before high school — you're in the right place. I'm glad you found us. Let's get to work.

Jordan Green

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  • 7 modules, 41 lessons
  • AI-adaptive lessons tuned to your level
  • Quizzes & checkpoints to lock in progress
  • Your own AI learning coach
  • Learn on any device, at your pace
  • Full access for as long as you're subscribed