Parent Guide
Understanding Your Grade 6 Child's FAST Scores
A plain-language guide to what the numbers mean, when the tests happen, and how you can help at home.
FAST Achievement Levels at a Glance
Level 3 or higher = your child is on track.
What Each Level Means for Your Child
Level 1 — Inadequate
Your child is performing significantly below grade-level expectations. This means there are foundational skills that need attention. Don't panic — this is exactly why the test exists: to identify where help is needed. Your child's school should provide an intervention plan with specific support.
What to do: Meet with your child's teacher to understand which specific skills need work. Ask about after-school tutoring, intervention groups, and practice you can do at home.
Level 2 — Below Satisfactory
Your child is approaching grade level but isn't quite there yet. This is the most common level where targeted practice makes the biggest difference. Many Level 2 students move to Level 3 with consistent skill practice.
What to do: Ask for specific IXL skills or practice activities. 15-20 minutes of daily targeted practice in the weak areas can make a significant difference by the next testing window.
Level 3 — Satisfactory (On Grade Level)
Your child is meeting grade-level expectations. This is the proficiency target. For Grade 3, this level satisfies the reading requirement for promotion. Your child has a solid foundation and is ready for grade-level work.
What to do: Celebrate the achievement! Continue reading together and encourage curiosity. Challenge your child with slightly above-level problems to keep growing.
Level 4 — Proficient
Your child is performing above grade-level expectations. They have a strong understanding of the material and can apply skills in different contexts. This is excellent performance.
What to do: Encourage enrichment — advanced books, math puzzles, real-world problem-solving projects. Ask the teacher about gifted/advanced opportunities.
Level 5 — Mastery
Your child demonstrates exceptional understanding well beyond grade level. They can handle complex problems and make connections across concepts. This is the highest level of performance.
What to do: Nurture their love of learning. Consider academic competitions, advanced reading material, or STEM activities that challenge their thinking.
When Does My Child Take the FAST Test?
Students take FAST three times per school year. Each test is called a "Progress Monitoring" (PM) assessment:
Baseline: Shows where your child starts the year.
Progress check: Shows mid-year growth.
Accountability: Determines proficiency and promotion.
How to Help Your Child at Home
For ELA (Reading & Writing)
- 1. Read together for 20 minutes every day. Take turns reading aloud.
- 2. Ask questions about what you read: "Why did the character do that?" "What do you think happens next?"
- 3. Look up new words together. Keep a vocabulary journal.
- 4. Write regularly — journals, letters to family, creative stories, or even grocery lists.
- 5. Visit the library weekly. Let your child choose books they're interested in.
For Mathematics
- 1. Practice math facts daily — addition, subtraction, multiplication, division fluency matters.
- 2. Use real-world math — cooking (fractions), shopping (percentages), time management, measuring things.
- 3. Play math games — card games, dice games, and board games that involve counting and strategy.
- 4. Ask "how did you solve it?" — understanding the process matters more than the right answer.
- 5. Do IXL practice if your school provides it. Ask the teacher for your child's specific skill assignments.
Are You a Teacher?
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