Texas CBE Learning Path — What to Take First (Credit by Examination Study-Order Guide)
The most common question we get from Texas families is not "which subject first?" — it is "does the order matter?" The short answer: you can start with any Credit by Examination (CBE) subject you like, but the math sequence (Algebra 1 → Geometry → Algebra 2 → Pre-Calculus) genuinely builds on itself, and the physical sciences lean on Algebra 1. Everything else can be taken standalone.
This guide walks through the study-order picture visually, then explains the reasoning behind each recommendation. It is a guide, not a gate — a student who already knows Geometry does not need to buy Algebra 1 first, and the site never blocks a purchase based on the diagram.
The learning path at a glance
The two "tracks" reflect how Texas high school math and science curricula are built:
- STEM track: Algebra 1 is the foundation. From there, students branch into Geometry, Physics, and Chemistry. Algebra 2 then combines Algebra 1 skills with the coordinate reasoning students picked up in Geometry, and Pre-Calculus extends Algebra 2. SAT Math sits alongside Algebra 2 because the Digital SAT tests roughly the same Algebra + Geometry core.
- Standalone subjects: Biology, Earth Science, and U.S. History do not require any prior CBE preparation. Students often take these first while their math sequence is still in progress.
Why the math order matters
Under Texas Education Code §28.023 (the acceleration statute), a student can earn a full course credit by passing a district-approved CBE at 80% or above, without ever sitting through the class. Under 19 TAC §74.24 (the credit-recovery route), a student who has had prior instruction can earn credit at 70% or above.
Both routes require the exam to cover the full Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for the course. In math, the TEKS are cumulative:
- Algebra 1 TEKS — linear and quadratic functions, systems, exponents, basic statistics.
- Geometry TEKS — proofs, congruence, similarity, right-triangle trigonometry, circles, area/volume. Assumes algebra fluency.
- Algebra 2 TEKS — polynomial, rational, radical, exponential, and logarithmic functions. Assumes Algebra 1 and expects Geometry-level coordinate reasoning.
- Pre-Calculus TEKS — trigonometric functions, parametric/polar forms, sequences and series, limits. Assumes Algebra 2 fluency.
Skipping a step is possible for a strong student, but the passing threshold does not adjust. If a student has never proved a triangle congruence, Algebra 2 problems that lean on Geometric intuition will feel harder than they need to.
Why Physics and Chemistry sit "after Algebra 1"
Neither Physics nor Chemistry requires Algebra 2 mathematically — the TEKS for both are written to be accessible after Algebra 1. But both courses use algebra heavily: kinematics equations, stoichiometry ratios, gas laws, Ohm's law, thermodynamic energy accounting. Students who take Physics or Chemistry before finishing Algebra 1 typically stall on the math, not the science.
If a student has finished Algebra 1 with confidence, either Physics or Chemistry is a reasonable next step alongside Geometry — the three do not depend on each other, and any order works.
Where SAT Math fits
The Digital SAT Math section tests the same Algebra 1 + Geometry + light Algebra 2 material that Texas students already study for CBE. That is why SAT Math sits on the Algebra 2 row of the path diagram: students who have completed Algebra 1 and Geometry can start SAT Math practice immediately, and students who have also completed Algebra 2 will find the harder Module 2 questions easier.
Standalone subjects — take them anytime
Biology, Earth Science, and U.S. History do not depend on prior CBE preparation. These are commonly the first exam a family attempts because they are self-contained, they satisfy graduation credit requirements the same way, and they let a student practice the CBE testing format without waiting for the math sequence to finish.
Biology, in particular, is often taken in 9th grade nationwide, so many students already have foundational content knowledge when they sit down to prepare.
A realistic multi-subject plan
A common shape we see from acceleration-minded families is:
- Summer before 8th grade: Algebra 1 CBE (unlocks the rest of the math track and both physical sciences).
- 8th grade: Geometry CBE while enrolled in Algebra 1 at school (or right after).
- Summer before 9th grade: Algebra 2 CBE, then Biology CBE if the student wants an extra credit.
- 9th grade: Pre-Calculus CBE, plus Physics or Chemistry CBE.
- 10th grade onward: SAT Math practice using the same skill base.
This is a picture of what an aggressive acceleration timeline looks like — most students move slower, and there is nothing wrong with that. The point is that the path exists, and every step is priced at $19.99 per subject with six months of access.
What the diagram is not
Three quick clarifications, because we get these questions constantly:
- Not a purchase gate. Any subject on the site can be purchased at any time. A student who wants to start with Pre-Calculus can. The path is guidance.
- Not a legal rule. TEC §28.023 and 19 TAC §74.24 do not require any specific study order. Districts and campus counselors are the authority on what counts for credit at your school.
- Not a replacement for your school's course sequence. If your district requires Algebra 1 → Geometry → Algebra 2 in a specific order for graduation, that district rule stands regardless of how CBE credits are earned.
Bottom line
The math sequence (Algebra 1 → Geometry → Algebra 2 → Pre-Calculus) is the one path where order genuinely matters, because each course's TEKS assume the prior one. Physics and Chemistry need Algebra 1 as a math foundation, not as a science prerequisite. Biology, Earth Science, and U.S. History can be taken standalone, in any order, whenever they fit a family's schedule.
Free sample questions are available on every subject page. If you are unsure where to start, Algebra 1 is the safest bet — it unlocks the widest set of downstream options.
Legal note. Texas CBE™ is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the Texas Education Agency (TEA), UT High School (UTHS), The University of Texas at Austin, or any school district. All practice questions are independently authored and modeled after the official Credit by Examination format for educational preparation purposes only. Policies, passing thresholds, and accepted providers may vary by district — always verify with the campus counselor.
Preguntas Frecuentes
Can I buy Pre-Calculus without buying Algebra 1 and Algebra 2 first?
Does Texas law require me to take CBEs in a specific order?
Which subject should a first-time CBE family start with?
Do I need Algebra 2 before Physics or Chemistry?
Is SAT Math the same as Algebra 2?
What if my student wants to skip Geometry between Algebra 1 and Algebra 2?
Is there a discount for buying multiple subjects together?
- Texas Education Code §28.023 (Credit by Examination for Acceleration)
- 19 Texas Administrative Code §74.24 (Credit by Examination with Prior Instruction)
- Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for Mathematics
- Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for Science
- Texas Education Agency — Credit by Examination overview




