A self-contained, self-paced TSIA2 and ACCUPLACER math platform built for school districts. Personalized practice generation, district-wide reporting, and adaptive mastery tracking — all from a single HTML file. No servers. No installs.
Most TSIA2 prep tools optimize for one thing: drill. MMA is built for the realities of district deployment — you need flexible practice, accountable reporting, and ironclad delivery on locked-down school networks.
Every problem is procedurally generated from carefully designed templates with randomized values, hints scaffolded to the answer, and distractors that mirror real student errors. The same student can drill the same subtype dozens of times and never see an identical problem.
One generator engine powers both interactive on-screen practice and print-ready worksheets. Custom titles, work-space sizing, side-by-side or single-column layouts, hint visibility, and PDF-export modes all draw from the same problem pool.
Four hierarchical roles enforce who can see whose data, who can create demo builds, and who can manage districts. Built around real school-district realities — campus-level masters and district-level masters, with a district audit log that captures every consequential change.
The TSIA2 Math test covers four content categories — Quantitative Reasoning; Algebraic Reasoning; Geometric & Spatial Reasoning; Probabilistic & Statistical Reasoning. ACCUPLACER spans Arithmetic; Quantitative Reasoning, Algebra & Statistics; and Advanced Algebra & Functions. MMA's ten categories and 150+ subtypes map across all of them — including factoring, linear functions, ratios, rational expressions, statistics, probability, geometry, distance, and midpoint.
Sources: Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board · College Board ACCUPLACER · TEA
Most prep tools are libraries of static problems. MMA is a problem factory — it produces fresh material every time a student or teacher opens it, calibrated to the same TSIA2 standards.
Bring it into a single classroom or your whole district. Either way, the file's the same — drop it on a Chromebook, share it on a USB stick, host it on your district's intranet. It works the same place every time.