Anonymous wrote:I’m glad you mentioned this because DD has always passed advanced, aced the honors class and scored 499. I was curious to see if the score would change this summer when they norm it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC typically gets >580 for all the past SOL math tests, so I am surprised to see that he barely passed advanced geometry this year. Is that normal? He is in Honor Geometry and doing very well (high A).
Same for our 7th grader. Usually gets 600.
This time 568, missing one M question on "Use coordinate methods to identify a transformation." - in all fairness though it's completely possible to miss one question. He also didn't get a 100 average this year, achieving only 3158 out of 3183.5 possible points (= 99.20%) in SiS. 3158 hard earned points, though, when you consider that missing a single answer on a test usually is -6. We're still proud of him.
Anonymous wrote:Why did you make your child take the geometry SOL when they presumably already had a verified credit in Algebra 1?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC typically gets >580 for all the past SOL math tests, so I am surprised to see that he barely passed advanced geometry this year. Is that normal? He is in Honor Geometry and doing very well (high A).
Same for our 7th grader. Usually gets 600.
This time 568, missing one M question on "Use coordinate methods to identify a transformation." - in all fairness though it's completely possible to miss one question. He also didn't get a 100 average this year, achieving only 3158 out of 3183.5 possible points (= 99.20%) in SiS. 3158 hard earned points, though, when you consider that missing a single answer on a test usually is -6. We're still proud of him.
Where did you get this detail?
From the "Student Detail by Question" PDF on the https://va-results.pearsonaccessnext.com website.
Your school will send you the access code at some point, I assume.
Never seen this site or been granted access. What region are you in- don’t have to say school, but curious if just your school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC typically gets >580 for all the past SOL math tests, so I am surprised to see that he barely passed advanced geometry this year. Is that normal? He is in Honor Geometry and doing very well (high A).
Same for our 7th grader. Usually gets 600.
This time 568, missing one M question on "Use coordinate methods to identify a transformation." - in all fairness though it's completely possible to miss one question. He also didn't get a 100 average this year, achieving only 3158 out of 3183.5 possible points (= 99.20%) in SiS. 3158 hard earned points, though, when you consider that missing a single answer on a test usually is -6. We're still proud of him.
Where did you get this detail?
From the "Student Detail by Question" PDF on the https://va-results.pearsonaccessnext.com website.
Your school will send you the access code at some point, I assume.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC typically gets >580 for all the past SOL math tests, so I am surprised to see that he barely passed advanced geometry this year. Is that normal? He is in Honor Geometry and doing very well (high A).
Same for our 7th grader. Usually gets 600.
This time 568, missing one M question on "Use coordinate methods to identify a transformation." - in all fairness though it's completely possible to miss one question. He also didn't get a 100 average this year, achieving only 3158 out of 3183.5 possible points (= 99.20%) in SiS. 3158 hard earned points, though, when you consider that missing a single answer on a test usually is -6. We're still proud of him.
Where did you get this detail?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC typically gets >580 for all the past SOL math tests, so I am surprised to see that he barely passed advanced geometry this year. Is that normal? He is in Honor Geometry and doing very well (high A).
Same for our 7th grader. Usually gets 600.
This time 568, missing one M question on "Use coordinate methods to identify a transformation." - in all fairness though it's completely possible to miss one question. He also didn't get a 100 average this year, achieving only 3158 out of 3183.5 possible points (= 99.20%) in SiS. 3158 hard earned points, though, when you consider that missing a single answer on a test usually is -6. We're still proud of him.
Anonymous wrote:My DC typically gets >580 for all the past SOL math tests, so I am surprised to see that he barely passed advanced geometry this year. Is that normal? He is in Honor Geometry and doing very well (high A).