Are you required to start from an equatorial parking orbit? Why not start from within the Moon's orbital plane? From the ground you can launch directly into the Moon's orbital plane from any location between 28 degrees South to 28 degrees North of the equator. That would save you a lot of fuel, as you wouldn't be burning any to make a plane-change.
A mathless way to figure out when your launch station is in the Moon's orbital plane is to simply wait for the Moon to be directly overhead. But this puts a restriction on the day you must launch. With a little more effort, you can figure out when your launch site intersects the Moon's orbit on any given day. It should happen twice a day. A program like Orbitron, or perhaps Celestia or Stellarium can probably tell you that. The program Orbiter will actually give you a map of Earth, with the Moon's orbital plane superimposed. Just wait until this line intersects your launch pad and you're ready to launch directly into the Moon's orbital plane.
Low-Earth orbit is a very expensive place to be making plane adjustments to your orbit. You can reach the Moon without traveling in its orbital plane, provided that you intersect its orbital plane as you arrive. Being further from Earth, the amount of fuel spent matching planes will be less than if you attempt to match planes in low-Earth orbit. But if I'm not mistaken, the least expensive way would be to launch directly into the plane to begin with. Then when you arrive, you've already got one of the components of your velocity vector wrt the Moon zeroed-out.
It's probably best to launch at a time when the Moon will be at perigee when you arrive, although I might be wrong. The Moon is traveling faster at perigee, requiring a heavier lunar orbit insertion burn. Perhaps its cheaper to spend a little more fuel on your TLI burn to travel to apogee where your orbit insertion burn will less expensive. You could also save a little fuel by timing your launch to coincide with a new or full Moon. It's a little easier to travel away from the Earth in the direction of its L1 or L2 points (wrt the Sun). But the Moon is deep enough in Earth's Hill Sphere that I doubt it would make a huge difference.
If this is orbital mechanics homework, the prof is probably going to want to see some calculations. Look up the formulas to find the line of intersection between 2 planes.