OAE Foundations of Reading 090 — anyone else struggle with the phonological awareness section?

by ingrid_p 173 views6 replies
I
ingrid_pOP
May 25, 2026

I'm an early childhood education teacher in Ohio preparing for the OAE Foundations of Reading 090 and the phonological awareness section is making me second-guess everything. I scored 78% on a full-length timed practice test last week, which should be above the passing threshold, but I got hammered specifically on the phonological vs. phonemic awareness distinction questions and anything involving prosodic awareness. I've been teaching K-2 for 4 years and I know this content in practice, but the way the exam frames the theoretical distinctions is different from how I actually think about it in the classroom.

I've got about 3 weeks left before my exam date and I'm averaging about 90 minutes of study per day. My plan is to keep doing timed practice sections and then drilling specific weak spots, but I'm not sure that's the most efficient use of time at this stage. Anyone who's recently passed the 090 — did you find intensive drilling on academic definitions worth it, or did broader review work better?

The constructed response component is also something I'm anxious about. I've read that it's scored on a 4-point rubric and that weak content knowledge will tank the score even if the writing is solid. Does the constructed response heavily mirror the multiple-choice content or does it go into areas that the multiple-choice doesn't cover?

R
rashid_c
May 26, 2026

Prosodic awareness questions are a small slice of the exam but they feel disproportionately confusing. I spent maybe 3 focused hours on just that concept in the week before my test and it cleared up most of my confusion. The LETRS materials have solid explanations if you can access them.

B
brett_l
May 26, 2026

The constructed response does mirror the MC content but requires you to apply it to a classroom scenario, not just define it. High-scoring responses reference specific instructional strategies by name and tie them to student data from the scenario. Vague answers about “supporting struggling readers” don't score well even when they're accurate.

78% on a full practice test with 3 weeks left is a solid position.

S
sophie_m
May 26, 2026

The phonological vs. phonemic distinction tripped me up too. What finally helped was drawing out the hierarchy explicitly — phonological awareness is the umbrella, phonemic awareness is one piece of it — and then mapping every question type to the right level. Once I had that visual model it clicked fast.

N
nico_b
May 27, 2026

90 minutes a day for 3 weeks is enough. Don't spread too thin — at this stage targeted drilling on your weak spots beats general review. Your practice test score is already strong; protect that by not burning yourself out on content you already know.

C
CareerSwitch_R
June 14, 2026

Phonological awareness got me too, and honestly the thing that helped most wasn't drilling more practice questions — it was sitting with every wrong answer and asking myself "why did the test writers put this here?" The distractors aren't random. They're designed to catch specific misconceptions, so if you understand the trap, you stop falling into it. I spent a whole afternoon on one practice set just reading the answer explanations, even for questions I got right.

Also worth noting: the reading foundations content bleeds into each other more than you'd think. I started doing the oae vocabulary development 3 questions and kept seeing concepts that clarified my phonological awareness gaps — the connections between phonemic awareness and decoding clicked for me there. A 78% on a timed test is solid, you're probably closer than it feels right now.

N
NervousNellie
June 14, 2026

Oh man, I felt this post in my soul. I was scoring in the high 70s on practice tests and still convinced I was going to fail because the phonological awareness questions felt so weirdly worded. I almost withdrew my registration two weeks out. What actually helped me was stopping the full-length timed tests for a bit and just drilling that one section obsessively until I could explain the difference between phonological and phonemic awareness in my sleep without second-guessing myself.

I passed on my first attempt and honestly didn't believe it when I saw the score. If you're already at 78% you're closer than you think. Don't let that one section mess with your head the way it messed with mine.

Ready to practice?
Free OAE practice tests with detailed explanations and instant results.
OAE Practice Test

Join the Discussion

Sign in or register to reply with your account, or reply as a guest below.