Author Topic: Taking a big test.  (Read 1602 times)

From Today to Wednesday, me and The GI of MA as well as the rest of my school are going to be taking a standardized test called PARCC. Wish me luck!
 /blogland


oh god you take PARCC too? my county recently got switched over to that and I heard it's a rather hard test. I've never taken it before so I don't really know about it.

why does everyone say it's hard
its easy as forget, just a pain to do

is this just a different version of the ACT or SAT?

is this just a different version of the ACT or SAT?
well, its on the computer

is this just a different version of the ACT or SAT?
its supposed to replace the HSA I think
well, its on the computer
i had to do the test of the test so I had to do it all by hand

I have no clue was the PARCC or the HSA is. The only standardized tests I've taken while in highschool is the ACT, ASVAAB, NWEA

lol parcc


don't worry about how well you do, it doesn't reflect on you as an individual but as your class as a whole
for those who don't know what it is, it's standardized testing done via a computer over  about a week.
each subject of the test is divided up into sections with around 20 - 25 questions each subject with 2 - 3 sections
« Last Edit: March 30, 2015, 11:09:40 AM by TrollBoat »

sounds exactly like NWEA

I took the PARCC tests about two weeks ago.
They're horrid.

in elementary, middle, and my first year of high school, we were required to take this computerized test called the MAP test 2 times every school year (one for each semester).

usually kids hated it but i loved it because i was actually pretty good with it.

the way it would work is if you continued to get right answers, the questions would get harder. and vice versa. there would be around 42 to 58 questions (42 questions for english and 58 for mathematics)

in elementary, middle, and my first year of high school, we were required to take this computerized test called the MAP test 2 times every school year (one for each semester).

usually kids hated it but i loved it because i was actually pretty good with it.

the way it would work is if you continued to get right answers, the questions would get harder. and vice versa. there would be around 42 to 58 questions (42 questions for english and 58 for mathematics)
That actually sounds like a fun form of testing.

That actually sounds like a fun form of testing.
trust me it's just your average bland computer test