How GED Students Are Evaluated

By Barbara Lee Norris, published Sep 07, 2007
Published Content: 34  Total Views: 15,278  Favorited By: 23 CPs
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General Education Diploma (GED) programs in the United States have an excellent testing instrument, called TABE, that is used to pre-test and post-test every student. GED instructors administer initial, mid-year, and end-of year tests to measure student gains.

After a student enrolls in a class, he or she is given a "Locator Test." This is a short test that helps determine which TABE test is needed: easy, medium, difficult, or advanced.

An instructor trained specifically to administer the TABE test is able to test several students, at different levels, at the same time. Students are tested in Social Studies, Science, Language Arts, and Math. Each section of the test is timed. The timing can be challenging for instructors, because completion times are different between test levels. Sometimes instructors gather several students at the same level to make testing easier.

The TABE test is worth its weight in gold. Test results pinpoint exactly where a student should begin working. For example, a student may pass basic math skills and is ready to begin geometry. Another student may need to work on long division. An individual plan of study, based on TABE test results, is developed by the instructor for each student. Students do not have to waste time on skills already learned, and they do not have to struggle with material that is too advanced.

Students are able to look at their plan and know exactly what they are shooting for. It is less overwhelming to think about mastery of one skill at a time rather than thinking about an entire subject area. Instructors update student plans on a regular basis, and find resources to compliment what is being learned.

Some students take the TABE and the results show a high enough score to take the GED examination. These students are immediately scheduled for the exam. The GED examination is made up of five subject areas: Language Arts (Reading), Language Arts (Writing), Math, Social Studies, and Science. The exam is administered at another testing site, often a college or university.

How GED Students Are Evaluated

Students study independently to prepare for the GED examination.

Credit: Chris Coggburn

Copyright: Chris Coggburn

Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 15 of 15
 
 
Great work~!

Posted on 07/18/2008 at 1:07:53 PM

 
Excellent information in this one. Great job!

Posted on 06/30/2008 at 8:06:50 PM

 
Good, useful information. Thanks for sharing.

Posted on 09/26/2007 at 2:09:00 PM

 
I've been trying to talk someone I know into getting her G.E.D.

Posted on 09/18/2007 at 7:09:00 PM

 
Very informative !

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 6:09:00 PM

 
Good information.

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 9:09:00 AM

 
Great information on an important subject.

Posted on 09/12/2007 at 7:09:00 PM

 
Great job!!!!

Posted on 09/12/2007 at 8:09:00 AM

 
I got my GED in 1995 (two years before I was supposed to graduate high school). I did the testing to find that I needed very little preparation and was three points off from an Honors GED. I've been told that over half of high school graduates would not be able to pass the GED test. Strange, huh?

Posted on 09/12/2007 at 7:09:00 AM

 
Interesting

Posted on 09/11/2007 at 8:09:00 AM

 
I didn't know how GED testing worked... great article! Thanks!

Posted on 09/11/2007 at 7:09:00 AM

 
Great article. I have wondered about the testing.

Posted on 09/10/2007 at 8:09:00 AM

 
Great article.

Posted on 09/08/2007 at 6:09:00 PM

 
Great information!

Posted on 09/08/2007 at 5:09:00 PM

 
Good informative article!

Posted on 09/07/2007 at 7:09:00 AM

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