- Services
Testing Links
Advanced Placement (AP)
The AP® Program is making some improvements to the way it works.
You’ll register for exams in the fall, and you’ll need to be aware of fees for ordering late or canceling your exam:
- Digital activation: At the beginning of the school year, you’ll complete a simple online enrollment
process that will give you access to the new classroom resources and provide information needed to
register for the exams through myap.collegeboard.org. - Fall exam ordering: AP Exams must be ordered by no later than November 1st this year, so look
for instructions from Mrs. Petter about how to sign up for the exams. - Fees for late orders or canceled exams: The base AP Exam fee stays the same, but fees will apply
for exams ordered after November 1. Payments are still to be made in the ASB Office. Fee Waivers can be picked up in the ASB Office as well. All payments must be made on or before March 1st; monthly installments will be accepted prior to March 1st.
ACT
- 4 Sections, each worth 25%
- Composite Score will be an average of all test portions, except Writing
- No "Guessing Penalty"
- Vocabulary is slightly less important
MATHEMATICS (1 - 36)
SCIENCE REASONING (1 - 36)
READING (1 - 36)
Optional WRITING Portion *Required by UC System
SAT Reasoning Test
SAT I
Writing Component (200 - 800)
- Mulitple Choice: Improve Sentences, Identify Errors
- 25 Multiple Essay: will judge composition and grammar
- 60 Minutes
Critical Reading (200 - 800)
- Reading Passages
- Sentence Completion
- 70 Minutes
Mathematics (200 - 800)
- Multiple Choice
- Number Operations, Functions, etc.
- Algebra, Geometry, Statistics, etc.
- 70 Minutes
Balanced Summative Assessments for ELA and mathematics. Results from these
assessments are just one piece of information to help teachers, parents/guardians, and
students understand how well a student is meeting the grade-level standards.
learning. These resources include formative assessment tools and interim assessments.
Formative assessment is a process that teachers use every day to check on student
understanding. It includes a variety of informal and formal strategies to help both
teachers and students assess what students are learning. This information can then be
used by both teachers and students to decide what they must do next or differently to
help students learn the material they have not learned.
the material they have been taught over a period of time and what may need to be
reviewed or retaught. These types of tests, called interim assessments, may be given
at the end of a few days (such as a mathematics quiz or a spelling test), after a unit of
instruction (such as a chapter test or unit writing assignment), or after a few weeks (such
as a quarterly test). More information about the Smarter Balanced Interim Assessments
is available on the CDE’s Interim Assessments Web page at http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/tg/
sa/sbacinterimassess.asp.
How the Online Smarter Balanced Assessments Are Different from Previous California Tests?
The new Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments are very different from the old STAR tests in several ways:
- They are aligned with California’s new content standards for ELA and mathematics.
- They reflect the critical thinking and problem solving skills that students will need to
be ready for college and the 21st century job market. - They are taken on a computer and are adaptive, which means that during the test,
the questions will become more or less difficult on the basis of how the student
performs. If the student answers a question correctly, the next question may be a bit
more challenging; if the student answers it incorrectly, the next question may be less
difficult. - They provide many more supports for students who need them, including students
learning English and students with disabilities, as described in the section below.
STATE SEAL OF BILITERACY
Eligibility Criteria for a Student Whose Primary Language is English
Each of these three academic requirements shall be fulfilled.
- Students must have completed all English–language arts (ELA) requirements for graduation with an overall grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 or above in those classes.
- Students must have passed the California Standards Test (CST) in ELA (administered in grade eleven) at the “proficient” level.
- Students must demonstrate proficiency in one or more languages other than English through one of the following methods:
- Pass a foreign language Advanced Placement (AP) exam, including American Sign Language, with a score of three or higher.
- Pass an International Baccalaureate examination with a score of four or higher.
- Successfully complete a four-year high school course of study in a foreign language and attain an overall grade point average of 3.0 or above in that course of study.
- If no AP examination or off-the-shelf language test exists and the district uses its own language examination, the school district must certify to the State Superintendent of Public Instruction (SSPI) that the test meets the rigor of a four-year high school course of study in that foreign language.
- If a district offers a language examination in a language in which an AP examination or off-the-shelf examination exists, the district language examination must be approved by the SSPI.
- Pass the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) II foreign language exam with a score of 600 or higher.
Eligibility Criteria for a Student Whose Primary Language is not English
If the primary language of a student in grades nine to twelve, inclusive, is other than English, the student shall also meet the following two academic requirements:
1. Achieve Early Advanced proficiency level on the California English Language Development Test (CELDT), which may be administered an additional
time, as necessary.
- Meet the requirements above as stated in 1, 2, and 3.