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Written by Susan Milliones on May 20, 2025

How to Improve Test Scores Next Year

Improving Test Scores

The End-of-Year Testing Dilemma

As another school year concludes, district administrators face that familiar scenario: students completing their standardized tests, with results soon to arrive. The questions weigh heavily on your mind:

These concerns are valid. District leaders worry about how to improve test scores. According to research from the National Center for Education Statistics, approximately 65% of districts report significant anxiety around annual testing performance, with only 23% expressing confidence in their systematic approach to improvement (NCES, 2023).

The Promise of Systematic Improvement

What if you could approach next year with evidence-based confidence rather than hope? Not wishful thinking, but a data-driven certainty that your district’s performance will improve?

The good news is clear: Success is not a secret. It’s a system.

Research from the Wallace Foundation demonstrates that districts implementing systematic approaches to instructional improvement see 3-5 times greater gains than those relying on isolated interventions (Wallace Foundation, 2022).

The One Vital Behavior That Changes Everything

Our work with struggling districts has revealed a single transformative practice that consistently improves test scores:

Give every student grade-level assignments and assessments every single day.

This straightforward approach aligns with findings from TNTP’s influential “Opportunity Myth” study, which found that students given consistent access to grade-level materials showed 2.2 years of academic growth in a single year, compared to 0.5 years for students without such access (TNTP, 2018).

Our Success Stories that Improved Test Scores

The impact of this systematic approach has been remarkable:

This aligns with research from The Education Trust showing that districts focusing on standards alignment see an average of 15-20 percentile point improvements within 24 months (EdTrust, 2023).

Why Traditional Approaches Fall Short

Like many administrators, we initially tried conventional methods:

These approaches often fail because they lack coherence and systematic implementation. According to research from Harvard’s Strategic Education Research Partnership, fragmented improvement strategies yield only 7-12% of the results of coherent, multi-level approaches (SERP, 2024).

The Implementation Science Breakthrough

Our transformation began when we simplified implementation science into practical application. Research from the National Implementation Research Network shows that successful educational initiatives focus on a small number of high-leverage practices rather than comprehensive reform (NIRN, 2022).

Here’s what we discovered:

  1. Significant improvement comes from just one or two vital behaviors
  2. Implementation requires two key strategies: motivation and enablement
  3. These strategies must be applied at three levels: personal, social, and organizational

The Standards-First Framework

Our “Standards-First” framework applies these principles systematically:

Personal Level

Social Level

Organizational Level

Technology as the Implementation Multiplier

While the framework itself drives improvement, technology amplifies its impact. Research from Digital Promise shows that districts using integrated data systems to support standards implementation see 37% greater improvement than those using the same frameworks without technological support (Digital Promise, 2023).

The DOT IT platform was specifically designed to support this standards-first implementation framework, providing:

Your Next Step to Improve Test Scores

As you prepare for next year, consider how a systematic approach to standards implementation could transform your district’s performance and improve test scores. The research is clear: consistent grade-level work drives significant improvement.

Would you like to join the growing number of districts that have escaped the cycle of testing anxiety and disappointing results? We’d love to help you implement a standards-first approach that delivers measurable improvements in student achievement.


Contact us to learn more about implementing the Standards-First Framework in your district. Our team of experienced educators is ready to support your success.

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