US History STAAR Test: Texas EOC Study Guide and Practice
Master the US History STAAR Test with our Texas EOC guide. Format, scoring, retakes, study tips, and free practice questions for 11th graders.

If you're an 11th grader in Texas — or the parent of one — the US History STAAR Test is probably on your mind. And honestly? It should be. This end-of-course exam isn't just another test sitting on your spring schedule. It's a graduation requirement, a snapshot of what you've learned across one of the broadest history courses in American high school, and a chance to show the state of Texas that you actually paid attention during all those PowerPoints on the Gilded Age and the New Deal.
Here's the thing though. The STAAR US History exam isn't designed to trick you. It's a TEKS-aligned assessment that pulls directly from what your teacher has been covering since August. The trouble is, the scope runs from 1877 all the way to the present day.
That's almost 150 years of presidents, wars, social movements, court cases, and economic upheavals — and the test expects you to navigate it confidently in a single sitting. So let's break down what you're actually walking into, how scoring works, what changed recently with the online format, and the smartest ways to prep without burning out before May rolls around.
This guide pulls from the most recent Texas Education Agency blueprints, conversations with veteran social studies teachers across districts, and the actual experience of students who've sat the exam in the last two years. No theory. Just what works. Whether you're a junior trying to lock in Approaches before May, a sophomore getting an early jump on prep, or a parent who wants to know how to help — there's something here for you.
One more bit of context before we dive in. STAAR is a criterion-referenced exam, not a norm-referenced one. That means you're not being graded against how other students performed. You're being graded against a fixed set of TEKS standards. Your score depends on what you know, not on how you stack up against the kid sitting next to you. That actually takes a lot of pressure off — there's no curve, no quota, no limited number of students allowed to pass.
US History STAAR Test at a Glance
Before we go any further, a quick reality check. The State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness — that mouthful behind the acronym — replaced the older TAKS exam back in 2012. Since then it's gone through several facelifts, with the most recent shift moving nearly all administrations online. That matters because the test now includes more than just multiple choice questions. You'll see griddable items, drag-and-drop tasks, hot-spot questions, and an extended constructed response that asks you to actually write. Yes, write. With words. In paragraphs. The days when STAAR was a pure bubble-sheet exercise are gone.
Texas Education Agency (TEA) develops the STAAR US History exam in partnership with educators across the state, which means the questions reflect what real teachers prioritize — not some out-of-state textbook publisher's idea of what matters. That's good news for you, because if you've been showing up, taking notes, and engaging with class discussions, you're already most of the way there. Item writers also field-test questions on Texas students before they appear on the operational exam, so the difficulty curve is calibrated for what Texas juniors can reasonably handle after a full year of instruction.
One thing parents often miss — and counselors don't always explain clearly — is that the STAAR US History exam scores feed into the state's accountability ratings for your school. That doesn't change anything about how the test is graded for you personally, but it does explain why teachers and principals care so deeply about how their students perform. There's pressure on everyone in the system.

Why This Exam Matters for Graduation
Texas requires students to pass five STAAR End-of-Course exams to earn a high school diploma: Algebra I, Biology, English I, English II, and US History. You can graduate without acing them — but you do need at least the Approaches Grade Level benchmark on each. Fall short, and you'll be looking at retakes, an Individual Graduation Committee review, or both.
Let's talk content. The STAAR US History EOC test is built around the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills — TEKS — for high school US History since 1877. That cutoff date isn't random. Texas treats Reconstruction as the bridge between US History (which 8th graders cover from colonization through 1877) and the high school course that picks up where middle school left off. So if you were hoping to be quizzed on Paul Revere or the Boston Tea Party, you can relax. None of that is on the 11th grade exam.
What is on it? A lot. The Industrial Revolution and the rise of big business. The Gilded Age with its robber barons and labor strikes. Progressive Era reforms — think Theodore Roosevelt trust-busting and the 19th Amendment. World War I, the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, the New Deal. World War II and the home front.
The Cold War, McCarthyism, the Korean and Vietnam conflicts. The Civil Rights Movement (and you'd better know more than just MLK). Watergate. Reaganomics. 9/11 and the War on Terror. The 2008 financial crisis. It keeps going right up to current events your teacher probably mentioned last week.
The TEKS framework groups all of this into roughly five reporting categories. Each category has a target weight — meaning a rough percentage of the total exam items that will come from that bucket. History as a category is the biggest, usually pulling around 30 to 35 percent of questions. The rest splits between geography and culture, government and citizenship, economics and science, and the cross-cutting skills category that tests source analysis and historical thinking. Knowing those weights helps you allocate study time. Don't spend equal effort on every category if one carries twice as many points.
Reporting Categories on the STAAR US History Exam
History — Covers the chronological sweep from 1877 to present, including major eras like Industrialization, Progressive Era, World Wars, Cold War, and modern America. This is the largest content block.
Geography and Culture — Tests how geography shaped American development, migration patterns, immigration waves, urbanization, and the cultural shifts that came with them (Harlem Renaissance, counterculture, etc.).
Government and Citizenship — Constitutional principles, landmark Supreme Court cases (Plessy, Brown, Roe, Miranda), amendments since 1877, and the evolving role of federal vs state power.
Economics, Science, Technology, and Society — Economic systems and policies (gold standard, New Deal, Reaganomics), scientific innovation, and how technology reshaped American life from the assembly line to the smartphone.
The question types deserve a closer look because this is where students get tripped up. Multiple choice is still the workhorse of the exam — expect somewhere around 65-70% of items in that format. But the rest? Different beasts entirely. Griddable questions ask you to produce a numerical answer (a year, a percentage, a number of states) and bubble it into a grid. There's no answer choice to second-guess yourself with, which sounds intimidating but actually rewards precise study. You either know the year the 19th Amendment was ratified or you don't, and no clever process-of-elimination will save you.
Then you've got the extended constructed response. This is where you'll read a primary source document — maybe a speech, a political cartoon, an excerpt from a treaty — and write a multi-paragraph response analyzing it. Rubrics typically reward students who can identify the historical context, explain the document's significance, and connect it to broader themes you've studied. Don't just summarize. Analyze. Big difference, and the graders absolutely know the difference. A summary tells them what the document says. An analysis tells them why it matters — and that's where the points live.
Drag-and-drop and hot-spot questions are newer additions that came along with the online format. These are surprisingly forgiving if you know the underlying content. Sequencing events on a timeline, matching presidents to their major policies, or clicking on the correct region of a map — these all measure the same knowledge as multiple choice, just in a more interactive way. Some students actually prefer them. Visual learners especially.

Question Types You'll See on Test Day
Now for scoring, which trips up almost every family I've talked to. Texas uses four performance categories on STAAR exams: Did Not Meet Grade Level, Approaches Grade Level, Meets Grade Level, and Masters Grade Level. To satisfy the graduation requirement, you need at least Approaches. Most colleges and scholarship programs that care about STAAR scores want to see Meets or higher. Masters is the gold standard — it's not common, and it signals strong college readiness in social studies content.
Raw scores get converted into scaled scores, and the scale runs roughly from 3000 to 5000+ depending on the year and form. You won't be calculating your own score, but knowing the bands helps. If you bomb the extended response but ace multiple choice, you might still hit Approaches. If you crush the writing and squeak by on multiple choice, you can still earn Meets. The exam rewards a balanced performance rather than punishing one weak area too harshly.
Score reports usually arrive about six to eight weeks after testing, available through the Texas Assessment Family Portal. The portal breaks down your performance by reporting category, so you'll see exactly where you scored well and where you stumbled. That's gold if you need to retake — you'll know whether to focus on history content, government, economics, or something else. Parents can also access the portal with their student's unique access code, which the school distributes.
If you don't earn at least Approaches Grade Level on your first attempt, Texas offers retake opportunities each summer, fall, and spring. You can retake the STAAR US History exam multiple times before graduation. Schools must offer prep support between attempts, and students with accommodations keep those accommodations on retakes. Don't panic if you miss the cut — plenty of students pass on attempt two or three.
Accommodations are a topic worth pausing on because the rules have shifted significantly in recent years. Students with an active IEP under special education services, or a Section 504 plan, can receive a range of supports on the STAAR US History exam. Common ones include extended time (typically up to time-and-a-half or double time), oral administration where allowed, content and language supports for emergent bilingual students, calculator access on relevant items, and the use of dictionaries or word lists for English learners.
The catch? Accommodations have to be documented in advance and used regularly during classroom instruction. You can't show up on test day asking for extra time if it's not in your paperwork. Talk to your case manager, your 504 coordinator, or your counselor early — not the week before the exam. The TEA has published an updated Accommodation Resources guide that breaks down exactly which supports are allowed for each STAAR EOC, and it's worth reading even if you're a parent trying to advocate.
For students new to the country or still developing English proficiency, the linguistic accommodations available on STAAR US History are genuinely robust. Bilingual dictionaries, oral translation of test directions, and extra time can dramatically level the playing field — but again, only if everything is documented before the testing window opens. If your student is on a Language Proficiency Assessment Committee (LPAC) plan, double-check with the LPAC coordinator that the right supports are flagged for STAAR.

Your US History STAAR Prep Checklist
- ✓Download TEA's most recent STAAR US History released items from the official Texas Education Agency website — these are real retired test questions and the closest thing to the actual exam you'll find for free.
- ✓Bookmark Texas Gateway, the state-run resource portal with free practice activities, video lessons, and TEKS-aligned study guides specifically for US History EOC.
- ✓Build a one-page chronology cheat sheet covering 1877 to present. Hand-writing dates and events helps lock them into memory better than rereading notes.
- ✓Practice the extended response format weekly in the month before the test. Use released primary source prompts and time yourself — 25 to 30 minutes is realistic.
- ✓Review landmark Supreme Court cases by decade. Brown v. Board, Plessy v. Ferguson, Miranda v. Arizona, Roe v. Wade, Tinker v. Des Moines — these come up repeatedly.
- ✓Take at least two full-length practice exams in test-day conditions. No phone, no music with lyrics, no snack breaks halfway through. Simulate the real thing.
- ✓On test day, eat breakfast that doesn't spike and crash your blood sugar. Bring approved water if your school allows it. Sleep matters more than one extra hour of cramming.
About prep resources — and this part matters because the wrong study guide will waste your time. Texas STAAR exams are state-specific. A generic AP US History prep book covers way more content than you need and structures questions in a totally different style. What you want is Texas-specific material that mirrors TEKS standards and STAAR question formats. Don't let an Amazon recommendation algorithm steer you wrong here.
The best free resource is TEA itself. The agency posts released test items, scoring guides for the extended response, and detailed blueprints showing how many items come from each reporting category. Texas Gateway adds free video lessons and practice quizzes. Mometrix publishes a Texas STAAR US History study guide that gets solid reviews — it's not free, but it's reasonably priced and Texas-focused. Your school library probably has it. So might the public library down the street. Lone Star Learning and several Texas-based tutoring companies also offer EOC-specific workbooks worth a look.
And then there's our own bank of US History practice questions, organized by era and updated regularly to reflect what students actually see on recent exams. Mix free resources with one solid paid guide and you'll have plenty without overspending. There's no need to buy six different prep books — diminishing returns kick in fast. A focused two months with the right materials beats six months of scattered effort every single time.
Pros and Cons of the STAAR US History Format
- +TEKS-aligned content means everything on the test was covered in your Texas classroom — no surprises from outside curricula.
- +Multiple retake windows each year give you real second chances if the first attempt doesn't go well.
- +Online format includes interactive question types that can actually be more intuitive than paper-and-pencil for visual learners.
- +Accommodations are robust for students with IEPs, 504 plans, or emergent bilingual status — and they apply to retakes too.
- +The exam emphasizes analysis over rote memorization, which means good readers and critical thinkers tend to do well even without exhaustive cramming.
- −The content scope is enormous — 1877 to present is a ton of material to keep straight in your head.
- −The extended response intimidates students who haven't practiced timed historical writing under pressure.
- −Online platform glitches occasionally happen, and they can throw off your pacing if you're not prepared.
- −Scoring bands and the difference between Approaches and Meets aren't always explained clearly by schools, leaving families guessing.
- −Test anxiety is real, especially knowing your diploma depends on passing — and that pressure can hurt performance if you don't manage it.
One more thing worth covering — the shift to online STAAR. Texas began transitioning STAAR exams to a fully online format starting with the 2022-2023 school year, and US History is now administered almost exclusively on computer. That means you'll be reading questions on a screen, navigating with mouse and keyboard, and typing your extended response into a text box with a basic word-count tracker. There's no spell-check on the writing portion, by the way. Read your essay back before submitting.
If you're not a fast typist or you struggle with screen fatigue, this matters. Practice writing your essays on a computer in the weeks leading up to the exam. Get used to the online tools — highlighting, flagging questions to revisit, using the embedded review screen. TEA's STAAR practice platform lets you experience the actual interface for free, and skipping this step is one of the most common mistakes I see students make. The content is the same as paper, but the experience is different, and unfamiliarity costs points.
Paper-pencil administrations still exist for students with specific accommodations or in rare district-level exceptions, but for the vast majority of 11th graders, online is the default. Schools usually run a brief tutorial or practice session a few weeks before the operational exam — take it seriously. That's your free dress rehearsal.
Here's my honest closing take. The US History STAAR Test is passable. More than passable — most Texas 11th graders clear the Approaches threshold on their first try, and a significant chunk reach Meets or Masters. What separates students who pass comfortably from students who struggle isn't usually raw intelligence. It's preparation strategy. Students who treat the exam like a marathon — pacing themselves, building knowledge gradually, practicing the unfamiliar question types, simulating test conditions — almost always outperform students who try to sprint the last two weeks.
Start early if you can. Use TEA's free released items. Pick up one Texas-specific prep guide. Practice the extended response. Get familiar with the online interface. And on test day, breathe. You know more than you think you do. The course content has been building toward this exam since August, and you've been absorbing it the whole time — even when it didn't feel that way during third period on a Tuesday in February. Trust the work. Show up ready. Then go enjoy your senior year.
If you take nothing else from this guide, take this. The STAAR US History exam tests how you think about American history, not just what you remember about it. Connect cause to effect. Tie movements to the eras that produced them. Recognize patterns across decades — labor unrest in the 1890s echoes in the 1930s, civil rights struggles repeat with new participants and new tactics. The exam rewards students who see history as a living, connected story rather than a list of isolated facts to memorize.
And one practical reminder. Bring your school ID on test day if your district requires it, double-check the testing room assignment the day before, and sleep. Sleep is a study tool too — maybe the most underrated one. Good luck out there.
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About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.
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