Pat Test

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PAT Test

(Progressive Achievement Test)



New Zealand teachers use a variety of tests to determine what level students are at, what progress they are making,
and where they may need extra help. Progressive Achievement Tests, commonly known as PATs, are one of the
main sets of tests schools use.
PATs are multiple-choice tests designed to help teachers determine achievement levels of students in Mathematics,
Reading Comprehension and Vocabulary, and Listening Comprehension. The test results help teachers decide what
kinds of teaching materials are needed and which methods or programmes are most suitable for their students. PATs
are also important because they identify the progress a student is making from year to year.
Schools buy PATs from the New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER), an independent research
organisation which first developed the tests more than 30 years ago. NZCER also provides a marking service for the
tests, which enables schools to access results and analysis online.
PAT: Reading Comprehension assesses how well Year 4 to 10 students understand the text they are reading.
Each test is organised around several extended pieces of writing which include stories, poems, reports and
explanations.
PAT: Reading Vocabulary assesses Year 4 to 10 students ability to understand the words they read. Each question
is based around a key word that is embedded in a short sentence. Students are asked to choose a synonym that
best represents the meaning of this word from a list of five possible alternatives.
PAT: Listening Comprehension measures Year 3 to 10 students' ability to understand spoken material. Students
listen to a passage and then answer questions. It helps teachers detect children with poor listening skills and is also
useful in identifying those children whose listening comprehension performance is significantly different from their
ability to comprehend written material.
PAT: Mathematics covers number knowledge, number strategies, algebra, geometry and measurement, and
statistics. PAT: Mathematics is for Years 4 to 10, but there is an additional, slightly easier test aimed at Year 4 which
some schools choose to use in Year 3.
Most schools will report regularly to you on your childs progress, through school reports and parent/teacher
meetings. You can ask about their current score range, and how they have progressed up the scale. PAT results can
be a good starting point to help you understand how your child is doing. A single test however should always be
considered alongside other assessment information.
Stanines allow your childs achievement to be compared with the performance of New Zealand students at a
particular year level. Scores on the PAT scale at each level are divided into nine stanines, one being the lowest
performance and nine being the highest. The average stanine is around five. So the stanine gives you an idea of your
childs achievement level in the context of their year group nationally.
The PATs can pinpoint areas where your child is doing well or poorly. The PAT is not a definitive diagnostic test but
just one test of many that will build a picture of your child for the teacher.
The content of the tests has been chosen to reflect the content of the curriculum. The scale can be matched to the
curriculum levels, so teachers and parents can see what curriculum level students are working at.
All the tests are multiple-choice format. Students are given a test booklet and an answer sheet. Test times range
from 25 to 45 minutes according to the particular test.
Schools generally run PATs early in the school year to help them develop their learning programme for the year.
They sometimes do them again towards the end of the year to measure progress. NZCER does not recommend
them being used more than twice a year.
PATs are one of the range of assessment tools schools use in order to help them determine how students are
achieving against the national standards in reading, writing and mathematics. PATs provide a snapshot of a students
performance in aspects of the curriculum on any one day. On its own, a PAT result should not determine whether or
not a student reaches the national standard. That decision will be made by teachers using a mix of other assessment
information, knowledge of the student, and the teachers professional judgement.

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