| For fifth graders in advanced math taking the sixth grade SOL, what score qualifies the kid for pre-algebra in 6th? Is it school dependent? |
| There's no pre-algebra in 6th per se. All kids take math 7 and then some go to math 7 honors and some to algebra 1 honors in 7th. |
| They are asking for a kid in math 5 who wants to jump to math 7. Basically advanced math for elementary. |
OP said 5th grade advanced math, which is 6th grade math. If they are placed via test score into advanced math, the score to stay in is usually pass advanced (500). |
| DS said the advanced 5th grade SOL was really hard this year. Apparently, some subject matter was not taught. |
| At our school it was pass advanced on SOL in 6th grade (which was Math 7) in order to take Algebra 1 in 7th. |
My child said the same thing. |
Same, my child said the class couldn’t even finish the test in a timely manner. |
Some kids will get next grade level standards. It is dumb. |
|
There are 55 questions for the 5th adv/6th grade math SOL this year. It's the first one based on the 2023 standards, so it's been heavily revamped. My class is taking it tomorrow and I'm dreading it.
Judging from the practice questions, there are LOTS of multistep questions where each choice essentially requires you to do a different math problem to rule it in or out. So 55 long, thinky problems with many chances to make those minor errors that 11-year-olds make. Also, they toss in 5 field test questions and 6 questions that can be from the grade above or below. Those don't count toward the 0-600 score. |
Thank you for sharing this insight. It is helpful. DS’s class took it today and apparently everyone was frustrated by the length and difficulty. Around 3 hours of testing. |
The 5th grade pacing content goes 5 weeks into the 4th quarter. I assume the 6th grade pacing is similar? 5 weeks lands at May 14. Some schools are taking the SOL tests as early as May 1. |
We learned years ago that there is no limit on the testing time (well, the limit is the end of the school day). My DD was feeling stressed about finishing "in time" one year and her teacher advised her of this. She really did take her time that year and took the pressure off of herself - maybe tell your kids (if they have any SOLs left) this is a thing. They finally told her when the buses were called to finish in 10 minutes. When the subject matter is challenging, I can understand the frustration of feeling it is a long test. But maybe introducing the no-time reasoning might help. |
| What was on the test that wasn't covered in class? |
My 5th grader said there were no surprises, so I don't know. They had finished the math curriculum a while ago though--been reviewing for the last few weeks. |