CMAS Scores Explained: Colorado Test Score Guide
CMAS scores explained for Colorado students and parents. Understand performance levels, what scores mean, and how to improve with free practice tests.
Every spring, Colorado students in grades 3–8 (and some high school grades) take the CMAS—Colorado Measures of Academic Success. Once the tests are scored and results are sent home, a lot of families stare at the score report and wonder what the numbers actually mean. This guide breaks down CMAS scores in plain language: how they're structured, what each performance level means, and what a score tells you (and doesn't tell you) about where your child stands.
CMAS is administered by the Colorado Department of Education (CDE) and covers English language arts, mathematics, science, and social studies at various grade levels. The assessments are aligned to Colorado Academic Standards, which are based on the Common Core State Standards for ELA and math and state-specific standards for science and social studies.
How CMAS Scores Are Structured
CMAS score reports include two key elements: a scale score and a performance level.
The scale score is a number that represents your student's performance on the exam. Scale scores vary by grade level and subject—they're not raw percentages. A scale score of 760 in 5th grade math doesn't mean 760 out of 1000; it's a value on a scale calibrated specifically for that grade and subject. What matters isn't the absolute number but where it falls within the performance level bands.
The performance level translates the scale score into one of four categories:
- Level 1 — Did Not Yet Meet Expectations: The student's performance indicates they haven't yet demonstrated the foundational skills expected at this grade level in this subject.
- Level 2 — Partially Met Expectations: The student shows some grade-level skills but has significant gaps. They're on a trajectory that needs intervention to reach proficiency.
- Level 3 — Met Expectations: The student demonstrates grade-level proficiency. This is the target performance level—it means the student has the skills needed to succeed at the next grade.
- Level 4 — Exceeded Expectations: The student demonstrates skills and knowledge above grade-level expectations.
For most purposes—whether that's identifying students who need support, tracking progress over time, or understanding if your child is on track—the performance level is the most meaningful number on the report.
What CMAS Score Ranges Look Like by Grade
Because scale scores are calibrated separately for each grade and subject, the specific numbers vary. Generally, for Colorado ELA and math CMAS assessments:
- Grade 3 ELA: Scale scores range roughly from 650–850, with Level 3 (Met Expectations) starting around 740–750
- Grade 5 Math: Scale scores range roughly from 700–900, with Level 3 starting around 775–790
- Grade 8 Math: The scale extends higher to reflect greater content complexity
The CDE publishes the exact cut scores by grade and subject each year—your school or the CDE website will have the most current tables. Use those for precise thresholds rather than any general estimate.
What CMAS Scores Don't Tell You
Here's something parents often miss: a CMAS score is a snapshot of one day's performance on one specific assessment. It's a useful data point, but it's not the whole picture of your child's academic ability. A few things to keep in mind:
CMAS scores don't predict classroom grades directly. A student can score Level 2 on CMAS and still earn A's in class if the classroom assessments don't align tightly with state standards. Similarly, a student can score Level 3 or 4 and still struggle with specific topics their classroom hasn't covered yet.
CMAS doesn't measure everything that matters—only what can be measured on a standardized test. Effort, growth mindset, creativity, collaboration skills, and other factors that predict long-term success don't show up in a scale score.
Year-over-year comparison has limits. Because CMAS is re-equated each year to maintain consistent standards, you can compare performance levels across years—but be cautious about comparing raw scale scores across years for the same student.
How to Use CMAS Scores Productively
The most productive use of CMAS scores is identifying specific skill gaps, not labeling a student as "behind" or "advanced." The score report breaks performance down by reporting categories within each subject—sub-scores that show where a student is stronger or weaker within the overall assessment.
For a student who scored Level 2 in math, look at which sub-areas (operations, geometry, statistics) showed the weakest performance. That tells you where to focus—whether that's working with a tutor, doing extra practice at home, or asking the teacher for targeted support. Broad interventions based only on a composite score are less effective than targeted work on identified gaps.
CMAS Science and Social Studies Scores
Colorado administers CMAS science assessments in grades 5, 8, and 11. Social studies assessments run in grades 4, 7, and 8. These follow the same four-level performance structure as ELA and math.
Science CMAS is aligned to the Colorado Science Academic Standards, which incorporate NGSS (Next Generation Science Standards) crosscutting concepts and practices alongside disciplinary content. Students are expected to demonstrate science and engineering practices—not just recall facts. The CMAS Research and Critical Thinking Skills practice set reflects the analytical demands of these assessments.
Social studies assessments cover Colorado history, geography, economics, and civics. The CMAS Colorado History and Geography practice test gives students hands-on experience with the types of document-based and data-interpretation questions that appear on the social studies exam.
Preparing Students for CMAS
The best CMAS preparation isn't intensive test cramming—it's consistent, high-quality academic work throughout the school year. That said, some targeted preparation helps students get comfortable with the format and question types, especially for students who experience test anxiety or aren't familiar with how CMAS questions are structured.
Practice questions that mirror CMAS format—scenario-based, multi-step math problems, evidence-based writing, and complex text analysis—are more useful than pure drill-and-practice exercises. The CMAS English Language Arts practice set helps students practice the kinds of reading and writing tasks they'll encounter on test day without turning preparation into a stressful event.
Accessing Your Student's Score Report
CMAS score reports are distributed through schools. Paper copies go home with students, and many districts also provide electronic access through the school or district's parent portal. If you haven't received your child's score report, contact the school's main office—they can confirm when reports were distributed and provide a copy if needed.
Score reports include the student's scale score, performance level, and sub-scores by reporting category. Read the sub-scores carefully—they're often more actionable than the overall performance level. A student who scores Level 3 overall but shows weakness in one sub-area has a clear, targeted opportunity for growth. A student who scores Level 2 with consistent weakness across all sub-areas needs broader intervention.
Final Thoughts
CMAS scores are a useful but limited tool. Used well, they help families and educators identify where students need support and how instruction is working. Used poorly—treated as a final verdict on a child's ability—they create anxiety without producing useful action.
The most productive response to CMAS results is specific: identify the area of greatest need, find out what skills underlie the gap, and build a targeted plan to address it. Consistent practice with CMAS-aligned questions and content—throughout the year, not just before the test—is the most evidence-based approach to improvement. The CMAS data interpretation and analysis practice test is a good place to start for students who need to strengthen evidence-based reasoning across subjects.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.