SOL Practice Test

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SOL Test Prep Guide 2026 β€” Virginia Standards of Learning

SOL test prep is the cornerstone of academic success for Virginia students from grade 3 through high school. The Standards of Learning (SOL) program, administered by the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE), measures student achievement in Reading, Writing, Mathematics, Science, and History/Social Science. Whether you are a student preparing for your first SOL test or a parent helping your child earn verified credits toward graduation, this guide walks you through exactly what to study, how to study it, and where to find the best free practice resources.

Virginia SOL Overview

The Virginia Standards of Learning assessments are state-mandated tests designed to ensure students meet grade-level academic benchmarks. The VDOE develops and administers these tests to evaluate both individual student progress and the effectiveness of Virginia's public schools.

Grades 3 through 8 sit for SOL tests in Reading and Mathematics every year. In addition, students in Grade 5 and Grade 8 also take a Science SOL, making those two years particularly intensive. History and Social Science SOL tests are given at grades 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7, with content building year over year toward the high school End-of-Course tests.

High school End-of-Course (EOC) SOL tests are tied to specific courses rather than grade levels. Students take the EOC test for a course when they complete it. The current high school EOC subjects are:

Passing an EOC SOL test earns the student a verified credit, which is required for graduation under Virginia's standard and advanced diploma pathways.

SOL Subject Areas by Grade Level

Each subject area builds on prior knowledge, so preparation should always include a review of concepts from previous grades β€” especially for students who struggled in earlier years. Below is a grade-by-grade breakdown of which SOL tests students face and what those tests emphasize.

Reading SOL (Grades 3–8 and EOC English): Assesses literary analysis, informational text comprehension, vocabulary in context, and written language conventions. The high school EOC English: Reading test focuses on complex literary and informational passages, author's purpose, and synthesis of multiple texts.

Writing SOL (EOC English: Writing): Tests editing skills, sentence formation, usage, and mechanics. Students read passages with embedded errors and select the best correction. Writing composition is assessed through a separate writing portion graded by a rubric.

Mathematics SOL (Grades 3–8 and EOC Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry): Builds from number sense and operations in the early grades through data analysis, proportional reasoning, and introductory algebra by middle school. High school EOC tests cover algebraic reasoning, functions, geometric proof, and statistical analysis.

Science SOL (Grades 5, 8, and EOC Biology and Chemistry): Grade 5 covers life processes, ecosystems, and physical science basics. Grade 8 expands to Earth science, physical science, and life science at greater depth. EOC Biology focuses on cell biology, genetics, and ecology; EOC Chemistry covers atomic structure, chemical reactions, and solutions.

History/Social Science SOL (Grades 3–7 and EOC): Traces Virginia and United States history, world history, civics, and economics. The EOC sequence covers Virginia and U.S. History, World History I (ancient–1500), World History II (1500–present), and World Geography.

πŸ”΄ Reading & Writing SOL
🟠 Mathematics SOL
🟑 Science SOL
🟒 History & Social Science SOL
SOL Study Strategies by Subject

Targeted, subject-specific study is more effective than general review. Use the strategies below for each SOL subject area:

Reading & Writing

  • Read a variety of texts daily β€” literary fiction, informational articles, and primary source documents.
  • Practice identifying the main idea, supporting details, author's purpose, and tone in every passage you read.
  • For Writing SOL, review the four categories of errors most commonly tested: sentence formation, usage, mechanics, and spelling/capitalization.
  • Complete timed passage sets to build reading stamina before test day.

Mathematics

  • Work through released SOL items from the VDOE website β€” they are free and mirror the actual test format exactly.
  • Focus on your weakest reporting category first (use your most recent benchmark report to identify it).
  • For EOC Algebra I: master linear equations, inequalities, and interpreting graphs before moving to systems.
  • For EOC Geometry: know the properties of triangles, quadrilaterals, and circles, and practice two-column and paragraph proofs.
  • For EOC Algebra II: prioritize functions (linear, quadratic, exponential, logarithmic) and descriptive statistics.

Science

  • Use the VDOE Science Curriculum Frameworks as a checklist β€” every testable concept is listed as an essential knowledge point.
  • Draw diagrams of cell structures (Biology) and reaction types (Chemistry) and label them from memory.
  • Practice interpreting data tables and graphs β€” these question types appear on every science SOL.
  • For Grade 5 and Grade 8 SOL: review all three science strands (life, physical, Earth) equally since each is weighted on the test.

History & Social Science

  • Create timelines for each major historical period tested β€” chronological order questions are common.
  • Study primary source documents such as the Declaration of Independence, Constitution, and key speeches for EOC U.S. History.
  • Use outline maps to practice identifying geographic features tested on the World Geography SOL.
  • Memorize key dates, turning points, and cause-and-effect relationships rather than isolated facts.

SOL Scoring and Pass Rates

SOL tests are scored on a scale of 0 to 600. The passing score for most tests is 400, which represents proficient performance at grade level. Students who score 500 or above earn an Advanced Pass, which carries additional weight in high school diploma requirements and college readiness documentation.

Virginia reports three performance levels on student score reports:

It is important to note that a student can pass a course and still fail the SOL test β€” and vice versa. Course grades and SOL scores are calculated independently. For graduation purposes, only the SOL score determines whether a verified credit is awarded.

How SOL Results Affect Graduation

Virginia's graduation requirements are directly tied to verified credits earned through passing EOC SOL tests. The number of verified credits required depends on the diploma type:

Students who do not pass an EOC SOL test on the first attempt have multiple retake opportunities. Virginia offers SOL retakes each semester, and students who fail a required EOC SOL may use their highest passing score from any attempt to earn the verified credit. Schools are required to provide additional academic support and remediation for students who fail.

The VDOE also has an appeals process for students who pass the course but fail the SOL test, allowing school divisions to petition for a verified credit waiver in certain hardship or special circumstances. Students and parents should consult their school counselor about this option if relevant.

Available SOL Resources

Virginia students have access to an extensive library of free, official preparation materials directly from the VDOE. The following resources are the most useful for structured test preparation:

Pros

  • Use official VDOE released tests as your primary study material β€” they are free and exactly match the real test format, question types, and difficulty level.
  • Study from the VDOE Curriculum Frameworks checklist so every testable concept is covered systematically rather than relying on guesswork about what will be tested.
  • Practice under timed conditions from the start β€” the SOL has strict time limits, and building test-taking stamina prevents rushing and careless errors on test day.
  • Focus extra study time on your lowest-scoring reporting categories identified from benchmark or diagnostic test reports, not on topics you already know well.
  • Familiarize yourself with the TestNav platform before test day so you can navigate the equation editor, use the highlighting and elimination tools, and locate reference materials without wasting test time.

Cons

  • Cramming the night before the test β€” the SOL measures cumulative knowledge built over months or years; last-minute review of new material is far less effective than distributed practice over several weeks.
  • Ignoring weak subjects and only reviewing material you already understand β€” this feels productive but does not improve your score where it matters most.
  • Using outdated study guides or materials from before the most recent SOL revision β€” Virginia updates its standards periodically, and old materials may include retired content or miss newly added topics.
  • Skipping the TestNav practice interface β€” students unfamiliar with the testing platform waste time navigating tools during the real test, which can lead to time pressure errors on later questions.
  • Treating all question types the same β€” multiple-choice, technology-enhanced, and open-ended response items each require a different strategy; failing to practice all item types leaves gaps that appear only on test day.
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SOL Test Questions and Answers

How many SOL tests do Virginia students take each year?

The number of SOL tests per year depends on grade level. Students in grades 3 through 8 take Reading and Math SOL tests every year. Grade 5 and Grade 8 students also take a Science SOL, and most students in grades 3 through 7 take a History/Social Science SOL as well. High school students take End-of-Course SOL tests for specific courses β€” typically one or two per semester depending on their schedule β€” so a student taking Algebra I and Biology in the same year would sit for two EOC SOL tests.

What score do you need to pass a Virginia SOL test?

The passing score for most Virginia SOL tests is 400 on a scale of 0 to 600. This is the proficient level. Students who score 500 or above earn an Advanced Pass, which exceeds grade-level expectations. For high school End-of-Course tests, a score of 400 or higher earns the student a verified credit, which counts toward the verified credit requirements for a Standard or Advanced Studies diploma. Students who score below 400 do not earn a verified credit and may be required to retake the test.

How many verified credits do you need to graduate in Virginia?

Virginia's Standard Diploma requires 6 verified credits: 1 in English, 1 in mathematics, 1 in a laboratory science, 1 in history/social science, and 2 additional credits from any of those four areas or from an approved career and technical education assessment. The Advanced Studies Diploma requires 9 verified credits: 2 each in English, mathematics, laboratory science, and history/social science, plus 1 additional credit. Verified credits are earned by passing End-of-Course SOL tests with a score of 400 or higher.

Where can I find free Virginia SOL practice tests?

The best source for free Virginia SOL practice tests is the VDOE website, which publishes full released SOL tests with answer keys for most subjects and grade levels. These are the highest-quality preparation materials available because they are developed by the same team that writes the actual tests. In addition, the VDOE provides standalone practice item sets organized by reporting category and a TestNav practice site that replicates the actual testing interface. PTG also offers free SOL practice tests with instant scoring and detailed explanations for all major subject areas and grade levels.
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