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Is an SOL Score of 246 a good / passing score?
Are students with a 246 SOL Score on track to be be college and career ready?
Only PeerPower answers these questions by being the EXCLUSIVE provider of SOL percentile scores.
A: PeerPower is the exclusive provider of percentile scores for California, Virginia, Maryland, and Massachusetts. All states release the percentage of students who pass the test, but the percent who passed is not the same as a percentile score. Other states provide the average score for a test so you can know if you / your student is below, at, or above average. But percentile scores are better measures of whether your student is on track to be college and career ready.
A: The most common reason this happens is you have requested a test that was not given at the school you selected. Make sure you entered a valid test/school combination. For example, Algebra I is not usually given in elementary schools, but some customers get PeerPower Percentile Reports for an elementary school student first and then go on to select a test for an older High School student without updating the school. We are working on making this easier for our customers. If you still think you entered a valid request and got no results, please contact us with the State/School Year/School District/School/Test information for the test your student took, and we will get back to you.
A: Please use the contact us page to request your state / school district. We now have PeerPower Percentile Reports for CAASPP tests taken in every school district in California, SOL tests taken in every school district in Virginia, PARCC tests taken in every school district in Maryland, and MCAS tests taken in every school district in Massachusetts!
A: The How it Works page shows you how to find your / your student's PeerPower Percentile Report. If you don't have your / your student's score, simply stop by, call, or email your school and request another copy of your / your student's score report.
A: States that provide data to PeerPower strip any identifying information from the data - so the data states provide us do not have gender or race information, and this allows states to comply with the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). PeerPower doesn't know what score your student received - that is why you need to know what score your student received in order to get their Percentile Report.
A: Yes. States provide PeerPower with the anonymous data we use to compute the Percentile Reports soon after they have finished processing the scores. This is usually right after they send scores to parents. When you order from PeerPower we email you whenever the data has been updated (different states update at different times during the year). But this is also the good thing about having annual access. When the data is updated you can come back and check your student's percentiles. Typically, though, the State and District percentiles don't change much from year to year. The School percentiles can be more volatile because they are based on a smaller set of students - just the students who took that test at your student's school, as opposed to the entire school district or state.
A: States provide PeerPower with the anonymous data we use to compute the Percentile Reports.
A: At some point many families have conversations with their students about how the world works - and part of that means that your student will be compared to their peers. Does that mean when that comparison happens your student always has to win? Of course not. However, it's safe to say at some point your student will be compared to peers in a situation that matters to them and they will want to stand out compared to those peers. Whether it's when they apply for an internship / magnet school / college / graduate school / job / loan, start a business, or even when appealing to a potential significant other! Does this mean they should live their life constantly comparing themselves to their peers? Again, of course not. Every family will decide on an individual basis in what parts of their life a student will want to stand out compared to their peers. School and standardized tests are a way to introduce this concept to our students and to give them an opportunity to practice at it. But it's up to you to decide whether and when that conversation happens.
A: You know your child best. Some kids will be motivated to continue to work hard (or harder) at school when they know where they stand compared to their peers.
A: PeerPower customers (typically parents) use the percentile scores in different ways. Some customers simply feel better having a more complete picture of where a student ranks compared to his or her peers. There are many other scenarios where percentile scores are valuable, here are the most common examples:
A: Michael Nolan (LinkedIn) is the founder of PeerPower. He lives in Fairfax County, Virginia. He and his wife are the very fortunate parents of two amazing sons - one graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School for Science & Technology as a National Merit Scholar and currently is studying Astrophysics at Arizona State University and one graduated George C. Marshall High School with an International Baccalaureate (IB) degree and currently attends the University of Virginia.
A: States don't supply percentile scores (see "Why doesn't my student get percentile scores..."). Our students are growing up in a world where they are competing not just with other Americans but job seekers from all over the world. Families know that a good education is more important than ever, and want to know if their students are on track, but they are either confused about test scores or don't believe they are valuable. While almost all researchers acknowledge that standardized tests don't measure everything important, there's a good deal of research showing that these tests do predict important long-term outcomes. PeerPower saw a need to provide percentiles to parents, students, teachers, and administrators and our company was born.
A: Most states created / use these standardized tests to comply with the No Child Left Behind Act and/or Every Student Succeeds Act, and those laws do not require that states calculate and provide percentile scores. Furthermore, and this gets a little technical/statistical, most state standardized tests are criterion-referenced tests, as compared to norm-referenced tests. Generally, states offer criterion-referenced tests because the state's goal is to see how many takers of the test simply pass - kind of like a driver's license exam. But at PeerPower we learned that percentile scores are good predictors of life outcomes, so we started PeerPower.
A: PeerPower Percentile Reports provide students, parents and teachers with a student's percentile score for the test they took. A percentile score tells you how a student did compared to other students who took the same test. For example, if a student's percentile score is 75, that means that student received a score the same or better than 75% of the other students who took that same test. Learn more about why percentiles matter.
A: By registering, you get FREE District percentile reports for all scores. This allows you to try out our website and see our reports at no cost to you. In order to see State and School percentiles for scores, you need to upgrade your access. After upgrading your access, you will be able to see State, District and School percentiles for all scores.
A: Yes. Families that qualify for Free or Reduced Price Lunch can use coupon code ICANSOAR during checkout to get 80% off.