We just got my daughter's PSSA results and I'm trying to figure out if a 1250 on the Math section is something to worry about. The report shows she's in the Basic range and says the Proficient cut-off starts at 1341. Her teacher hasn't called yet and I don't want to wait until parent conferences to understand what this means going into 5th grade.
She's always been stronger in reading — she scored 1380 on the ELA section which put her at Proficient — but math has been a struggle all year. She's been working with a tutor once a week for two months, so I was hoping to see something closer to 1300. Maybe another 6–8 weeks of targeted work would get her there, but I want to make sure we're focusing on the right standards.
From what I understand, 4th grade PSSA Math hits fractions, measurement, and basic geometry pretty hard. Is that where the gaps usually show up for kids at her level? Her tutor mentioned the Operations and Algebraic Thinking strand is the highest weighted — is that accurate?
Any advice from parents or teachers who've seen kids move from Basic to Proficient between grades would be genuinely helpful right now.
A 1250 in Basic is closer to Proficient than a lot of people realize — the gap is about 91 points, which is very bridgeable in one school year with consistent practice. Fractions and measurement are the highest-leverage areas for 4th-grade PSSA Math, so tell the tutor to focus there first.
Operations and Algebraic Thinking is weighted around 30% for 4th grade so yes, it's significant. But Number and Operations in Base Ten is right behind it. If she's shaky on place value and multiplication fluency, that's a great place to start.
My son was at 1280 in 3rd grade and hit 1395 by 4th. We did 20 minutes of math work every night on top of homework, nothing intense. Consistency matters more than any single session.
Basic isn't failing, it just means there's room to grow. Most teachers use the sub-score breakdown more than the total anyway, so ask her teacher for the strand-level report if you don't have it already.