California sets its own standards but builds them on national frameworks. The state adopted the Common Core for English and math, then wrote its own version of the Next Generation Science Standards. History and social science follow a long-running state framework that runs from kindergarten through a senior-year civics and economics course. Most subjects are reviewed and refreshed on a rolling cycle, with newer frameworks for the arts, world languages, and computer science.
A plain-language read of how the state runs school.
What students learn
English and math follow the Common Core from kindergarten through high school, with math opening into a traditional Algebra, Geometry, and Algebra II sequence after grade 8. Science is taught through the California version of the Next Generation Science Standards, where students plan investigations and explain phenomena rather than memorize vocabulary. History-social science runs as a sequence built around California and US history, world history, and a senior course in government and economics. Newer frameworks cover the arts, world languages, computer science, and social-emotional learning.
How students are measured
The main spring test is the CAASPP, which includes Smarter Balanced reading, writing, and math in grades 3 through 8 and again in grade 11. Students take the California Science Test once in elementary school, once in middle school, and once in high school. The grade 11 Smarter Balanced results can count toward college readiness in the CSU and most community college systems. English Learners also take the ELPAC each spring until they reclassify as English-proficient.
Frameworks adopted, by subject
The standards documents the state writes against in each subject.
The tests students take across K-12, grouped by purpose.
State summative
The high-stakes spring tests the state runs.
State test
Smarter Balanced ELA — Grade 3
Every California public school student takes this reading and writing test in the spring of grade 3. Students read short passages and answer multiple-choice, constructed-response, and a performance task tied to a longer prompt. It is part of the CAASPP suite.
The grade 4 ELA test in the CAASPP suite. Students read short passages, answer multiple-choice and constructed-response items, and write a short essay in the performance task.
The grade 5 ELA test in the CAASPP suite. Students read short passages, answer multiple-choice and constructed-response items, and write a short essay in the performance task.
The grade 5 science test in the CAASPP suite, based on the California Next Generation Science Standards. Online test covering Physical, Life, Earth and Space, and Engineering science.
The grade 11 ELA test in the CAASPP suite. The only Smarter Balanced administration in high school; results can satisfy the Early Assessment Program (EAP) for college readiness in the CSU and most CCC systems.
The grade 11 math test in the CAASPP suite. The only Smarter Balanced administration in high school; results can satisfy the Early Assessment Program (EAP) for college readiness in the CSU and most CCC systems.
Students take the CAST once in high school. Most schools administer it in grade 11 alongside the Smarter Balanced exams, but it may be given in grade 10 or 12 depending on a student's science course sequence.
Tests for English learners and world-language students.
World language
California Spanish Assessment (CSA)
An optional reading and listening test of Spanish proficiency in the CAASPP suite. Districts use it to award the Seal of Biliteracy or to validate dual-language program placements.
California's placement test for incoming English Learners. Given within 30 calendar days of enrollment when a Home Language Survey flags a language other than English, and decides whether the student is identified as an English Learner.
When given:
Within 30 calendar days of enrolling, when the Home Language Survey suggests a possible English Learner
California's annual English Language Proficiency Assessment. Every student identified as an English Learner takes the four-domain test (listening, speaking, reading, writing) each spring until they reclassify as English-proficient.
When given:
Spring window each year for current English Learners
An alternate English language proficiency assessment for English Learners with the most significant cognitive disabilities. Replaces the Initial and Summative ELPAC for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.
When given:
At enrollment (initial) and each spring (summative)
The state test for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities. Replaces Smarter Balanced ELA in grades 3-8 and 11 for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.
California Alternate Assessment (CAA) for Mathematics
The state test for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities. Replaces Smarter Balanced math in grades 3-8 and 11 for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.
The state science test for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities. Replaces the CAST in grades 5, 8, and once during high school for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.
California's fitness assessment for grades 5, 7, and 9. Administration was paused in spring 2022 while the program is redesigned to drop body-composition components; districts continue to receive guidance but do not currently submit student-level results.