It’s a common conversation between children and parents across the country. After test day, the child comes home confident, calling the test “easy” and saying they knew all the answers. However, a couple months go by and the official scores come back that tell an entirely different story. This disconnect is incredibly frustrating, leading to the mistaken belief that a child “just isn’t a good tester.”
In reality, these students have usually hit the “I know it” plateau. At this stage, state English Language Arts (ELA) tests shift their focus: they aren’t just testing whether your child understood the passage, but whether they can use reading comprehension skills to analyze it, infer meaning and support answers with evidence.
What Happens During State Reading Tests
Many states, including New York and Texas, have incorporated digital components into their assessments. This isn’t just about “typing instead of writing.”
- New York State Testing Program (NYSTP): The transition to Computer-Based Testing (CBT) requires students to use digital tools like highlighters and “strikethrough” functions while reading long passages on a screen.
- State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR): The “STAAR Redesign” introduced New Item Types. This means your child is no longer just picking A, B, C or D. They are now dragging and dropping words, highlighting evidence and completing multi-select formats that require careful attention to all correct answers.
What This Looks Like for a Student
Imagine your child is reading a passage about how bees help plants grow.
- Most students can understand the basic idea: “Bees help plants.”
- But the test doesn’t stop there.
A typical question might ask:
“Which detail best explains how bees help plants reproduce?”
To answer correctly, a student must:
- Understand the information.
- Figure out the key process.
- Choose the detail that clearly supports it.
Many students stop at the first step; they understand the topic, but don’t fully process how it works. Instead of choosing the details about pollen transfer, they pick a sentence like “Bees visit many flowers” which is true, but doesn’t actually answer the question.
In some cases, the test may go one step further and ask students to explain their answer in writing. For example:
“Explain how bees help plants reproduce. Use evidence from the passage.”
Now the task is no longer just choosing the right idea, it’s clearly expressing it using specific evidence.
Students must turn their thinking into a complete answer, not just recognize it. This is where many students hit what we call the “I know it” plateau. That’s when understanding feels complete, but the thinking and explanation aren’t strong enough to support it.
What Do the Scores Mean?
| NYSTP Level (NY) | STAAR Category (TX) | What this means for your child | Equivalent percentage |
| Level 4 | Masters | Mastery over the subject, student is well above the goal | 90%-100% |
| Level 3 | Meets expectations | The goal for the grade level, student is proficient and on track | 75%-89% |
| Level 2 | Approaching expectations | Danger zone, student is either barely meeting the goal or is falling behind | 60%-74% |
| Level 1 | Did not meet expectations | Significantly falling behind, student needs immediate intervention | Under 60% |
How Do Schools Use This Information?
Grades aren’t just for the fridge, but are crucial to several high-stakes decisions the school needs to make:
- Student Placement: Scores may be considered alongside grades, teacher recommendations and other factors when determining eligibility for advanced coursework such as Honors or Gifted and Talented (G/T) programs.
- Student Support: Lower performance levels may indicate a need for additional academic support, such as Academic Intervention Services (AIS) in New York, or may require mandatory accelerated instruction under HB 1416.
- School Funding– At a broader level, aggregated test results can inform school-wide planning, instructional focus areas and resource allocation.
Why Good Readers Still Struggle
The “I know it” plateau is why a student can be reading books well above their grade level, but still be stuck at Level 2, or just barely meet expectations. While high-quality books are essential for building vocabulary and fluency, even an avid reader can struggle when reading comprehension on state tests requires more than understanding the passage at a basic level. Students also need to decode the question, identify evidence and avoid tempting distractors.
- Question Decoding: Students often read a passage perfectly, but find the questions themselves written in a foreign language. They don’t understand how “What is the author’s primary purpose?” translates to plain English.
- “Trick” Answers: Parents often feel tests are “tricking” their kids. These tests use “distractors,” answers that are true in the real world but are not supported by the passage. Without a clear strategy, kids pick based on gut feeling rather than textual proof.
- Digital Fatigue; Scrolling through long passages on a screen for hours is mentally draining. By the middle of the test, many children stop looking for evidence and start click-guessing just to be finished.
What Students Really Need: Reading Comprehension Beyond Basics
When students say “I know it” but get it wrong, they aren’t lying. They can understand what happened in the story, but just can’t grasp why it matters. That is where reading comprehension becomes more than basic understanding. It involves a clear progression: reading → thinking → expressing.
How Weak Reasoning Sabotages Multiple-Choice
Many students go from reading straight to answering, but skip the most important step: structured thinking. Without structured thinking, students confuse a character’s actions with the character’s motivation, causing them to pick the distractor choice instead of the right one.
Guessing Vs Inferring
A child who reads for the feeling is guessing. A child who reads for logic is inferring.
- Guessing: “I think the character is brave because they did something scary.”
- Inferring: “I know the character is brave because paragraph 4 says they ‘stepped forward despite their trembling hands.'”
State tests like the STAAR and NYSTP often require students to select answers that are supported by textual evidence. Without clearly identifying that support, students are more likely to choose answers that feel correct but are not fully aligned with the passage.
Cultivating Structured Thinking
Moving beyond the “I know it” plateau involves developing a reliable framework for turning abstract story points into a concrete logical flow. By giving these thoughts a visible structure, students can bypass the digital fatigue that often causes frustrated click-guessing. Instructional tools, such as graphic organizers or structured frameworks, can support this process.
1. The Tree Map Strategy
One helpful instructional approach is organizing information using a Tree Map. Before looking at the multiple-choice options, a student can quickly categorize the text into three logical branches:
- What: What are the key facts of the event?
- How: How did the character react or change?
- Why: What was the author’s underlying purpose for this section?
This simple act of classification ensures that when they see a distractor answer, they can immediately identify that it doesn’t belong.
2. The “Evidence Receipt” Game
You can reinforce this at home by using your child’s favorite books to require “proof” during everyday reading. If your child says a character in a movie or book was “selfish,” ask them for the Evidence Receipt: “Which specific action or line of dialogue proves that?” This habit trains the brain to ignore gut feelings and focus on the physical evidence required for a high score.
Closing the Logic Gap
Success on state ELA tests depends on moving beyond simple comprehension to master the critical stages of thinking and expressing. When a student uses structured thinking, they create a reliable framework that distinguishes action from motivation, allowing them to bypass distractors with ease. When students learn to connect ideas with clear evidence, they are better equipped to navigate complex questions and avoid common mistakes. This is how they move past the “I know it” plateau and secure a score that truly reflects their potential.
Tonight, turn your child’s nightly reading into a practice field for logic. Try the Evidence Receipt game with just one chapter—it’s the simplest way to start turning knowing into proving.
Frequently Asked Questions
▶ How can I tell if my child is struggling with deeper reading comprehension?
Look for signs like choosing answers that are “kind of right” but not fully supported, difficulty explaining why an answer is correct or frustration with open-ended questions. If your child understands what they read but can’t point to evidence or explain their thinking clearly, they may need support moving beyond basic comprehension.
▶What makes state reading tests more challenging today?
Keep it simple. Modern tests often include digital tools and new question types like drag-and-drop, multi-select and written responses. These require students to carefully evaluate evidence, not just pick a single correct answer.
▶ How can I help my child improve reading test performance?
Focus on building structured thinking skills. Encourage your child to identify evidence in the text, explain their reasoning and practice strategies like asking “why” and “how,” not just “what.”
▶ How does Epic help improve reading comprehension?
Epic supports reading comprehension by giving kids access to a wide range of high-quality books and learning resources that build vocabulary, fluency and critical thinking. By encouraging consistent reading and engagement with texts, Epic helps children move beyond basic understanding and practice the deeper thinking skills needed for success on state reading tests.