30-Day TExES Math 7-12 Study Plan
Written by Dr. Mienie Roberts · Texas math professor · Updated June 2026
Most TExES Math 7-12 candidates either over-prepare in content and under-prepare in pedagogy, or they study without structure and run out of time. This 30-day plan fixes both. It's designed for someone working full time — 45–60 minutes per day is enough if you're strategic.
Before you start: Pull up your most recent score report if you have one. Identify your two lowest domains. Those get 40% of your study time in weeks 1–3. If this is your first attempt, start with the domain breakdown below.
Understanding the exam first
TExES Mathematics 7-12 (235) has 100 scored questions across 6 domains. Here's the weight breakdown — and the honest difficulty rating:
| Domain | Weight | Difficulty | Focus tip |
| I — Number & Algebra | ~22% | Medium | Linear systems, functions, sequences |
| II — Geometry & Measurement | ~17% | Medium-Hard | Transformations, coordinate proofs |
| III — Functions | ~19% | Hard | Most-failed domain — start here if retaking |
| IV — Statistics & Probability | ~13% | Medium | Normal distribution, sampling |
| V — Math Processes & Pedagogy | ~13% | Very Hard | The hidden killer — see warning below |
| VI — Calculus | ~16% | Hard | Limits, derivatives, basic integrals |
⚠️ The Domain V trap: 13% of the exam (about 13 questions) tests how you would TEACH math — not just solve it. Most first-time test-takers don't study this at all. Most retakers underestimate it. If you answer 10 of these 13 incorrectly, that alone can drop you below 240.
Week-by-week plan
Week 1 — Diagnose and target
Goal: Find your gaps. Don't study randomly — let the data tell you where to focus.
- Day 1: Take a 50-question diagnostic on QuantegyAI. Note your weakest 2 domains.
- Day 2–3: Domain I deep-dive — Number & Algebra (focus: functions, linear systems).
- Day 4–5: Domain III — Functions (exponential, logarithmic, rational).
- Day 6: Domain V intro — 30 pedagogy questions. Read every explanation carefully.
- Day 7: Review wrong answers from the week. Make a "mistake log."
Target: 50–70 questions per day. About 45 minutes.
Week 2 — Content deep-dive on weak domains
Goal: Fix the 2 domains that are costing you the most points.
- Day 8–9: Your weakest domain (from diagnostic) — 60 questions, review all wrong answers.
- Day 10–11: Domain II — Geometry, transformations, coordinate proofs.
- Day 12: Domain IV — Statistics & Probability (normal distribution, confidence intervals).
- Day 13: Domain V — 40 more pedagogy questions. Focus: identifying student misconceptions.
- Day 14: Full 100-question mock exam #1. Timed. Score it. Note every missed question.
Mock exam day: 3.5 hours. Plan your schedule around it.
Week 3 — Calculus + pedagogy mastery
Goal: Calculus is 16% of the exam and many candidates ignore it. Don't.
- Day 15–16: Domain VI — Calculus: limits, derivatives, basic integration.
- Day 17: Domain V — 50 pedagogy questions. These repeat patterns — you're building pattern recognition.
- Day 18–19: Your second weakest domain (from mock exam #1 results).
- Day 20: Mock exam #2. Compare scores with week 2. Are your weak domains improving?
- Day 21: Rest. Review only your mistake log — nothing new.
Week 4 — Simulate and sharpen
Goal: Build exam-day confidence. Simulate the real test conditions.
- Day 22–24: Rotating review — 30 questions per domain each day. Maintain momentum.
- Day 25: Mock exam #3 — full timed simulation. You should be hitting 240+ by now.
- Day 26–27: Fix anything still red on your competency map. Focus only on gaps.
- Day 28: Domain V final pass — 40 questions. By now the pedagogy patterns should feel familiar.
- Day 29: Mock exam #4 — final practice run. Note your predicted score.
- Day 30: Light review only. Read your notes. Sleep early. You're ready.
The 80/20 rule for TExES: Focus 80% of your time on your two weakest domains and Domain V pedagogy. A 10-point improvement in one weak domain beats 2-point improvements across all six.
What to do the week before your exam
- Stop learning new material after day 28. Reviewing what you know is better than cramming new content.
- Take mock exam #4 exactly 3 days before your real exam. Use it as a confidence check, not a study session.
- Get your testing center location confirmed. Know where to park. Arrive 30 minutes early.
- Sleep 7–8 hours the night before. Seriously. Sleep improves test performance more than a 2am cram session.
Want this plan on autopilot?
QuantegyAI runs this entire plan adaptively — it diagnoses your gaps on day one, targets your weak competencies automatically, gives you 4 full mock exams, and sends you daily practice reminders. The Retaker Bundle includes a 30-min call with Dr. Mienie to review your personal score report and customise the plan.
Get the Retaker Bundle — $99 →
Pass guarantee included. 90-day access. Book your consult on Calendly.
Frequently asked questions
Can I pass TExES Math 7-12 in 30 days?
Yes — if you have a math background (college-level calculus and beyond) and study 45–60 minutes per day consistently. If your math is rustier, plan for 60–90 days.
What score do I need to pass?
The passing scaled score is 240 on a scale of 100–300. On a raw basis, aim to answer approximately 65–70% of questions correctly.
Is this plan good for retakers too?
Yes — but retakers should also read their official score report from their last attempt and adjust week 1 to focus on their documented weak domains. If you want help doing that, the Retaker Bundle includes a consult where Dr. Mienie reviews your report with you personally.
What about TExES Math 4-8?
The same 30-day structure works for 4-8 (115). The domain weightings are slightly different but the weekly rhythm applies. QuantegyAI covers both exams.