Praxis Study Guide: Free Prep Materials, Resources, and Test-Day Strategy
Free Praxis study guide with topic breakdowns, prep timelines, scoring tips, and practice tests. Pass Core, 5001, and subject Praxis exams faster.

The Praxis is rarely the test that sinks a teaching career. The wait, the panic study cram, and the second attempt fee — those are the real costs. Most candidates who fail their first sitting did not study the wrong things. They studied the right things in the wrong order or leaned on outdated materials.
This guide fixes that. It walks through what each Praxis exam actually measures, how to plan your prep, where to grab free resources, and how to read your score report so the next sitting (if you need one) is a quick formality.
One quick note before we dig in. The Praxis is not a single test. It is a family of exams run by ETS, including the Core Academic Skills for Educators (Reading, Writing, Math), the Praxis Subject Assessments (5001 Elementary Education and dozens of secondary content tests), and the Principles of Learning and Teaching series.
Each one has its own format, timing, and scoring band. A study plan that ignores those differences leaves you guessing on test day. Start by checking the Praxis exam prep overview for your specific test code before you build a timeline.
What the Praxis Actually Tests
The Praxis Core tests the basics — the things states want every classroom teacher to have nailed down regardless of subject area. Reading (5713) is 56 questions in 85 minutes, heavily passage-based. Writing (5723) splits 40 multiple-choice items with two argumentative essays inside 100 minutes.
Math (5733) gives you 56 questions in 90 minutes with an on-screen calculator for most items. Passing scores vary by state, but the common floor sits at 156 Reading, 162 Writing, and 150 Math. Your state's department of education publishes the exact numbers, and yes — they sometimes raise the bar quietly between license cycles.
The 5001 — Elementary Education: Multiple Subjects — is the big one for K-6 candidates. It is four separate subtests bundled together: Reading and Language Arts (5002), Mathematics (5003), Social Studies (5004), and Science (5005).
You can take them on the same day or split them up, and each subtest has its own passing score. Failing one means a retake of just that subtest, not the whole package. Plan your study windows accordingly: most candidates pass Reading and Social Studies on the first try and stumble on Math or Science, so weight your prep hours toward the two harder subtests.
Praxis at a Glance
Before you build a six-week study plan, take one full-length timed practice test for your specific Praxis code. The category breakdown shows you exactly where to spend the next 40 hours. Skip this step and you will waste 30% of your prep time reviewing material you already know.
Praxis Exam Families
Reading, Writing, and Math basics every classroom teacher must pass. Required in most states before subject testing. Reading is 85 minutes, Writing is 100 minutes including two essays, Math is 90 minutes with an on-screen calculator.
K-6 elementary teacher exam. Four bundled subtests — Reading and Language Arts (5002), Math (5003), Social Studies (5004), Science (5005). Passable individually with separate passing scores per subtest, so retakes can target a single weak area.
Single-content tests for secondary teachers. Codes like 5039 (English Language Arts), 5165 (Mathematics), 5236 (Biology), 5081 (Social Studies). Each one has its own ETS Study Companion that lists the content category weights you should prep against.
Principles of Learning and Teaching — pedagogy and case-study based exams. PLT K-6, PLT 5-9, and PLT 7-12 versions exist. Required in some states alongside content tests. Case studies make up roughly 25% of the score, so prep includes practicing constructed-response answers.

Building a Study Plan That Actually Works
Six weeks is the sweet spot for Praxis Core. Eight to ten weeks works better for 5001 because of the four-subtest structure. Subject assessments depend on your background — a recent biology grad may need three weeks for the Biology Content Knowledge test, while someone returning to teaching after a decade should plan for eight.
Use the first week strictly for diagnostics. Take one full-length timed Praxis practice test per section, score it honestly, and let those weak categories drive your topic order. Studying in test-code order is a beginner mistake; studying weakest-first compounds gains fast.
Split each study session into three blocks. Twenty minutes of concept review — reading, watching, or working examples. Twenty-five minutes of untimed problem sets on the same topic. Then ten minutes reviewing every miss, writing down why you missed it in plain English.
That last block is where the scoring jumps come from. "I didn't know the formula" is fixable in five minutes. "I rushed and skipped a step" is a process problem that needs a different fix — slowing down, underlining, or building a checklist. Mix those fixes up and your error rate drops quickly.
Two weeks out, switch to mostly timed practice. Untimed work builds knowledge; timed work builds the pacing reflexes that score points on test day. Aim for two full-length timed tests per week in those final two weeks. You want to feel the clock pressure before you feel it for real.
Save one fresh, never-seen practice test for the final weekend — taking it under strict conditions and reviewing it cold is the best predictor of your actual scaled score. If that simulation puts you within five points of passing, you are ready. If you are still ten or more below, push the test date.
Study Plan by Timeline
Weeks 1-2: diagnostic test plus weakest topic review. Read the ETS Study Companion for your test code in the first 48 hours so you know the content category weights. Weeks 3-4: second weak topic plus mixed review with at least three timed mini-sections each week to build pacing reflexes.
Week 5: full timed practice tests under realistic conditions — same time of day, same room temperature, same break schedule. Week 6: light review, sleep priority, and a one-day taper before test day. This pacing works for most Praxis Core first-time takers and produces a 15-25 point scaled score lift over crammed two-week plans.

ETS publishes recommended cut scores, but your state can require higher. A 156 Reading passes in Tennessee but not in some New England states. Verify with your state DOE before setting a target — needing five more points is way easier than discovering it on score release day.
Free Praxis Study Materials Worth Your Time
ETS publishes free Study Companions, interactive practice tests for some codes, and Khan Academy partnerships for Core Math. Those are non-negotiable starting points. Add to that the free practice tests on this site — every test code has at least one full-length set, and most have 6-10 topic-specific quizzes.
Cross-reference at least two sources per topic. If our scoring tip and ETS's Study Companion agree, you are looking at a confirmed pattern. If they conflict, dig deeper because something has changed recently.
YouTube is a mixed bag. Channels run by current teachers usually give better explanations than channels run by full-time test prep brands, because classroom teachers know which student misconceptions actually show up. Search the test code plus "explained," not the test name plus "how to pass."
The first search returns content; the second returns clickbait. For Core Math, the Khan Academy Praxis Core Math course is excellent and free. For 5001 Math, supplement with a fifth-grade level math review book — the content level surprises candidates with strong upper-level math backgrounds who have forgotten the elementary methods.
State-licensed teacher prep programs sometimes post their internal study guides openly. Search "[state] Praxis study guide PDF" and you will find guides from places like Wisconsin DPI or Indiana DOE.
These are gold because they emphasize what their state's passing score requires — useful if your state has a higher cut than the ETS recommendation. Just check the publication date. Anything older than 2022 may reference outdated test versions. The 5001 was last revised in 2014 but its sample questions get rotated; the Core test got a full refresh in 2024.
Two Weeks Before Test Day
- ✓Two full-length timed practice tests booked into your calendar with no interruptions allowed
- ✓Whiteboard and marker for at-home math practice — practice solving with the same tools the center provides
- ✓Test center location confirmed: address, parking situation, ID requirements, and arrival time-buffer planned
- ✓Two forms of ID located and verified: one primary photo ID plus one secondary ID matching your registration name
- ✓Sleep schedule aligned to test time-of-day for at least seven nights before the exam
- ✓ETS Study Companion reviewed for your specific test code including all content category weight percentages
- ✓Snacks and water packed for break periods; nothing caffeinated past the morning of test day
- ✓Outfit selected with layers you can adjust quickly if the testing room runs hot or cold

The Math Trap Almost Everyone Falls Into
Praxis Math (Core 5733) is the highest-failure section, and the reason is not algebra. It is the on-screen calculator and the time pressure combined. The calculator works, but using it for every problem costs you 15-25 seconds per question — enough to leave 8-10 items unanswered at the end of the section.
Memorize times tables, common fraction-to-decimal conversions, and squares up to 15. Use mental math for any problem where the numbers are friendly. Reserve the calculator for messy decimals, square roots, or anything requiring more than two operations. Candidates who follow this rule score 6-12 points higher on average.
The other math trap is question order. Praxis Core Math does not go easy-to-hard. Hard items appear in random spots, and an early stumper drains the clock fast. Build a "two-minute rule." If you have spent two minutes and have not reached a clean answer, mark it, guess strategically, and move on.
You can come back if time permits. Most candidates who fail Praxis Math by five points or fewer would have passed had they enforced this rule. The score report does not care whether you guessed or solved — only whether the bubble is right.
Writing the Essays Without Losing Your Mind
The two Praxis Core Writing essays scare candidates more than they should. One is a source-based argumentative essay; the other is an opinion essay. Both are graded on a 1-6 scale by two readers, scores averaged and combined into your scaled writing score.
They are looking for a clear thesis, three supported body paragraphs, and a conclusion that goes beyond restating the thesis. Grammar matters, but a clean five-paragraph structure with three good examples beats a complicated essay with one brilliant insight every time.
Practice these by writing one timed essay per day for the two weeks leading up to test day. Do not worry about quality at first — the goal is automaticity. By essay ten, your introduction-thesis-three-supports structure should feel like muscle memory.
Spend the last five minutes proofreading for the four big mechanical errors: subject-verb agreement, comma splices, apostrophe mistakes, and pronoun reference. Catching those is worth more than rewriting an entire paragraph for style. Read your essay backwards sentence by sentence — it catches errors your forward eye skips.
Praxis Prep: Self-Study vs Paid Course
- +Self-study costs $0-50 in materials versus $150-400 for a paid course
- +ETS Study Companions plus free practice tests cover 90% of what is tested
- +You set the pacing — faster if you are a recent grad, slower if returning to teaching
- +Flexibility to focus on weak categories instead of generic curriculum
- −No instructor to ask when you get stuck on a math concept
- −Less accountability — easier to skip sessions when life gets busy
- −Need to assemble materials from multiple sources
- −No structured essay feedback for Writing 5723 — you will need a peer reader
How Praxis Scoring Actually Works
Praxis raw scores get converted to scaled scores using a process called equating, which adjusts for slight differences in difficulty between test forms. That is why "I got 35 out of 56 right" does not tell you whether you passed. The scaled score sits on a 100-200 range for Core tests.
Your state sets the passing threshold. Score reports usually arrive 10-16 business days after testing. Some test centers and dates produce same-week unofficial scores for Core math, but most candidates wait two to three weeks.
Failed scores are not always failures. They give you category-level performance breakdowns — "Below the Average Performance Range," "Within," or "Above" — for each content area. Those bands are your retake roadmap.
If you scored within range on three of four 5001 subtests and below on Science, retake Science alone, focus prep there, and do not waste hours re-studying the parts you already passed. Save the score report PDF; you will want it for your retake plan and for your teacher prep program records.
Registration and Test-Day Logistics
Register through the ETS Praxis portal at least four weeks before your target date. Popular Saturday slots fill fast, especially at urban centers in March-May during graduation and license rush. The standard fee runs $90-130 per test code; bundled 5001 costs about $185 for all four subtests.
Bring two forms of ID — one primary photo ID, one secondary. No phones, no smart watches, no scratch paper. The center provides a small whiteboard and marker. Practice working out problems on a whiteboard at home; it feels different from paper and trips up candidates who never practiced the swap.
Common test-day mistakes that cost real points: arriving without breakfast (energy crash hits during section three), wearing layers you cannot adjust quickly in a hot or cold room, drinking too much coffee, and skipping the optional break between subtests when you are tired.
Take the break. Walk to the water fountain. Reset. The five minutes you "save" by powering through almost always costs you 10-15 points on the next subtest because your focus has shredded. Schedule your test for the time of day when you are sharpest, even if that means a Tuesday morning instead of a Saturday afternoon.
When to Retake and How to Plan It
ETS allows 21 days between attempts on the same test code. Use them. Retaking the next week after a fail almost always produces the same score — your prep gaps have not changed in seven days.
Three weeks lets you target weak categories, rebuild stamina, and take two fresh practice tests under timed conditions. If you missed passing by fewer than five scaled points, three weeks is usually plenty. If you missed by ten or more, give yourself six weeks and reconsider your study method, not just your study hours.
One last note: many candidates retake the Praxis after a heavy review of content but still score in the same range. That is almost always a pacing problem, not a content problem. Time yourself ruthlessly during retake prep.
Use a kitchen timer, not your phone, so you do not get notification distractions. The goal is not to know more — it is to apply what you already know fast enough. The candidates who jump 15+ scaled points between attempts are almost always the ones who fixed their pacing, not the ones who re-read another textbook chapter.
What to Skip in Your Study Sessions
Highlighting passages is a comfort activity, not a study tool. Reading research has shown highlighting alone produces almost no measurable retention gain compared to active recall. Replace it with the 30-second rule: after reading a paragraph, close the page and explain what it said out loud in your own words.
If you cannot, reread once. If you still cannot, you do not understand the concept yet — that is a target topic for practice problems, not for more reading. This single swap saves most candidates 8-10 hours over a six-week plan.
Skip flashcards for anything that is not memorization. Praxis Math has maybe 15 facts worth flashcarding — common conversions, key formulas, perfect squares. The other 85% is procedural and conceptual. Flashcarding "how to solve a two-step equation" is the wrong tool.
Practice problems with timed feedback are right. The same goes for Reading: do not flashcard literary terms unless your test code specifically tests vocabulary. Spend that time reading dense, source-style passages and answering questions about them — that is the actual skill the test measures.
Avoid buying multiple full-length test prep books from competing brands. They cover the same ground with cosmetic differences, and reading the same explanation three ways wastes time you should spend on practice tests.
Pick one trusted source for content review (ETS Study Companion plus this site is enough for most candidates) and add a second only if you find genuine gaps. The candidates who pass on the first try usually own one prep book at most, plus their state's official study guide if one exists.
Build your plan around your actual weak spots, lean on free ETS materials plus realistic timed practice, and do not waste retake fees on cram weeks that do not change your method. The Praxis is passable on a reasonable timeline.
Most teachers who try a second time pass — not because they got smarter, but because they got specific about what was holding them back the first time. Use the resources, plan the weeks, take the timed practice tests, and walk in trusting your preparation.
PRAXIS Questions and Answers
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.