- Middlesex County Magnet Schools
- District Testing
Contact
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Daniel Gallant
Supervisor of Educational Technology
and District Test Coordinator
GallantD@mcmsnj.net
732-257-3300, ext. 1943
Assessments
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Middlesex County Magnet Schools utilize a variety of assessment techniques to measure student progress towards state standards throughout the school year. Classroom, district, and state assessments are all conducted in order to provide a process to verify student proficiency of the academic standards set forth by the New Jersey Department of Education (NJDOE).
View the entire district assessment plan online.Annual Parent NotificatIon
New Jersey State Testing
Notification of Planned Statewide AssessmentDear parents and guardians,
Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 18A:7C-6.6, school districts are required each year by October 1 to provide notification to parents and guardians regarding information on any state assessment or commercially developed standardized assessment that will be administered in the school district during the current school year. It is important to note that all students may not be administered all assessments.
Specifically, we are required to share the following:
- The subject area of the assessment and grade levels covered by the assessment;
- The date or range of potential dates for the administration of the assessment;
- The time allotted for the student to take and complete the assessment;
- Any accommodations or accessibility options available to students;
- Information on how and when the student and his/her parent or guardian can access both sample questions and answers to the assessment and the student's results; and
- Whether the assessment is required by the State or federal government, or both.
All of the above-listed information can be found within the District Assessment Plan online.
Daniel Gallant
Supervisor of Educational Technology
Important Updates
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May 11, 2023: New Jersey Graduation Proficiency Assessment Update
Dear families,The New Jersey Department of Education has announced the approval of the cut score for the New Jersey Graduation Proficiency Assessment. Graduation-ready will be demonstrated with a 725. The NJDOE has also published what the approved alternative assessments will be and their cut scores for the Classes of 2024, and 2025.
Please see the full announcement from the NJDOE here. -
July 16, 2022: Updated Class of 2023 and Class of 2024-2025 Graduation Information
Dear Parents and/or Guardians,
The NJDOE has waived, for the Class of 2023, all assessment requirements for graduation from High School. Students still must satisfy all credit and local requirements, such as attendance, for graduation. Please see the linked memo from the NJDOE regarding this announcement. Contact your student's counselor if you have any questions regarding this.
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June 28, 2022: Graduation Information
Dear Parents and/or Guardians,
The NJDOE has updated their websites to better outline and explain how students in the Class of 2022 and 2023-2025 will achieve graduation from high school. Please click on the link below for more information. One major point that all should be aware of for the Class of 2023 - 2025 is that participation in the NJGPA is mandatory for graduation. Students will not have further pathways available to them unless the NJGPA has not only been attempted but the student is then remediated and tries a second time the following Summer or Fall. Click here to go to the NJDOE's website and more infomration. Please contact your students'counselor if you have any questions regarding this.
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August 25, 2021: Mandatory Start Strong Assessment
The State of New Jersey in a brodcast last year indicated the the Start Strong Assessment will be mandatory and held in the begining of the school year. The individual student results will be used only for school planning purposes and remediation. For further information visit NJDOE's Assessment Information Page. The dates for this assessment will be September 13th - October 22, 2021. As of this post, August 25th, 2021, the NJDOE plans to run a typical NJSLA testing Spring Block. Key dates and information are in the Parental Notification table above.
Historical Background
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New Jersey has administered statewide assessments since the 1970s, and over the years, the testing program has evolved. It began as a measure of basic skills, and after 1996, it has assessed the state's academic standards. In 2001, under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, every state was required to test students in mathematics and English language arts (ELA) in grades 3 to 8 and grade 11. That mandate is still in effect under the Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015.
In 2010, New Jersey adopted new, high-quality standards which changed the expectations in ELA and mathematics to emphasize higher-order thinking skills and not just memorizing information. In May 2016, the New Jersey State Board of Education adopted revisions to the mathematics and ELA standards and renamed all areas of the state's academic standards the New Jersey Student Learning Standards.
In the 2014-15 school year, New Jersey transitioned from its former assessments to the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) in mathematics and English language arts. The PARCC assessments more accurately measure the higher-level skills developed under the New Jersey Student Learning Standards and provide parents and educators with meaningful information to improve teaching and learning.
Starting in 2015, districts began to distribute annual PARCC student score reports to parents. There are resources on this assessment site to assist with interpreting individual score reports that can give parents a common language to use in discussions with teachers about their child's progress.
The adoption of the New Jersey Student Learning Standards for Science (NJSLS-S) in July 2014 initiated an overhaul of science education in New Jersey and the replacement of the former statewide science assessments – The New Jersey Assessment of Skills and Knowledge Science (NJASK), the New Jersey Biology Competency Test (NJBCT), and the Alternate Proficiency Assessment (APA) – with an assessment aligned to the state standards.
Starting in 2018, the New Jersey Department of Education requires that all science assessments be field tested in grades 5, 8, and 11. The spring 2018 administration of high school science assessments, both the New Jersey Student Learning Assessment Science (NJSLA-S) and the Dynamic Learning Map (DLM) in science will be administered. In the spring of 2019 these science assessments will again be administered and results of testing will begin the baseline year results.