Pass State Tests or Approved Alternatives to those Tests
The Certificate of Academic Achievement (CAA) and Certificate of Individual Achievement (CIA) tell families, schools, businesses and colleges that an individual student has mastered a minimum set of reading, writing and math skills by graduation.
State law (RCW 28A.655.061) dictates the assessment graduation requirement.
Beginning in the 2009-2010 school year, the high school Washington Assessment
of Student Learning (WASL) was replaced by the
High School Proficiency Exam
(HSPE). If a student has previously passed the WASL in a specific content area
(e.g., reading), the student is not required to take the HSPE. Visit
www.WAtesting.com for more information and a frequently asked questions section.
Students in the classes of 2009-12 can earn a diploma without one of the CAA/CIA certificates if they:
- Meet the state’s reading and writing standards,
AND
- Earn two credits of math after 10th grade.
Beginning with the class of 2013, students will be required to earn one of the
certificates by meeting state learning standards in reading, writing, math and
science.
Both the CAA and the CIA lead to a diploma. Only a student’s transcript
indicates which certificate the student earned.
- Students earn the CAA by meeting state reading, writing and math learning
standards on the high school WASL/HSPE,
OR
- One of the CAA Options (state-approved alternatives to the WASL/HSPE)
Option 1 - Earn your CAA by passing the WASL/HSPE:
Students have five chances to pass the WASL/HSPE in high school.
Testing windows
are in March/April and August. Additional retake opportunities will be available
in high school completion programs in community colleges.
Option 2 - Earn your CAA through
alternative assessment.
Most students will earn a high school diploma with a CAA by passing the High School WASL/HSPE in reading, writing and math. But some equally skilled students will need a different way to show what they know. The state has created a menu of options students may access after they take the High School WASL/HSPE at least once and meet any requirements spelled out in their
Student Learning Plan.
All of the CAA Options are designed and required to be at least as rigorous as
the High School WASL/HSPE. The CAA Options should not be viewed as an
alternative for students who have not yet acquired the reading, writing or math
knowledge and skills that are required by the state.
The CAA Options are:
- A collection of evidence consisting of student work showing they meet
grade-level academic standards.
- AP/College Admission test scores: A student earns scores at or above a
state-designated level on the SAT, ACT and Advanced Placement exams.
- An HSPE/Grades Comparison. Comparing a student’s grades in specified math or
English/language arts classes with the grades for students who passed the test.
(This option is only available to students in 12th grade with an overall
cumulative Grade Point Average (GPA) of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 grading scale.)
The CIA is available for students with an Individualized Education Program (IEP)
who are unable to take the High School WASL/HSPE (with or without
accommodations). As 10th graders, students in special education programs only
earn a CIA by passing the WASL/HSPE-Modified (the High School WASL/HSPE with the
passing score adjusted to Level 2) or Washington Alternate Assessment System
Portfolio. In grades 11 and 12, students who have not yet earned a CIA may also
use the Developmentally Appropriate Proficiency Exam (DAPE, formerly DAW), which
allows students to take the HSPE at a grade level that best matches their
abilities. To pass the DAW, students must earn Proficient (Level 3) on each test
taken. Any testing accommodations used must be consistent with the student’s
IEP. Students with 504 Plans are not eligible to earn a CIA.
Students receiving special education services must pass state-approved
special education reading, writing and math alternate assessments. Download the
handout “How Students in Special Education Participate in State Testing.”
Guidelines have been established for students who have
special, unavoidable circumstances (e.g., an extended illness, death of immediate family member, etc) or who
transfer to a Washington public school during their 11th or 12th grade year. For transfer students, the process considers whether students have passed a high school assessment in their former state. In addition, these transfer students may access the CAA Options without first taking the WASL/HSPE.
The appeal process ONLY applies to the state’s testing requirement for
graduation. Students with special circumstances and those who move into the
state during their 11th or 12th grade year need to ask their local school
district how they can fulfill the other statewide graduation requirements.
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