Please do not share these URLs with students.   (They include instructor's versions of the modules, which have answer keys, so obviously it would not be ideal for students in the classes to have those.)

Although all the modules are expected to be available under a Creative Commons license, at the current time only about half are.  Contacts at the Dana Center have said they will all be posted around Sept. 2012.      Titles of these modules are shown on the page at each of these links.   The entire table of contents is at the beginning of Module 1 of the Dana Center site.

Find most of these from the end of this page on the Dana Center website.   Modules 1 (Sampling and design of studies), 2 (Numerical and graphical summaries), 3 (correlation and linear regression), and 5 (relationships in categorical data.)

Find more on Mary Parker's website (posted to share with our teachers by permission from the Dana Center.)  (Modules 4 (nonlinear relationships) and 12 (additional topics in developmental math and linear and non-linear modeling)

Each topic of each module begins with a "rich task."   For a good introduction to this method, look at the first lesson in Module 3, Topic 1 - introducing scatterplots, the Cartesian coordinate system, and relationships between two quantitative variables.  Notice particularly the detailed descriptions of the scaffolding and the things the teacher should make sure are covered in summarizing the results of a part of an activity.

Note that all these lessons are Version 1.0.   In fall 2011, we taught from Version 1.5, and in Fall 2012, we are teaching from version 2.0.   Those will eventually be available from Carnegie under a Creative Commons license but, at the current time, are only available to teachers in the programs.