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Renaissance Star Timetable 2026–2027 Guide

2026–2027 School Testing Guide

Renaissance Star Assessment Timetable: Complete Guide for Reading, Math & Early Literacy

A parent- and teacher-friendly guide to Renaissance Star testing windows, Star Reading, Star Math, Star Early Literacy, scoring, growth formulas, and how schools usually schedule benchmark and progress-monitoring assessments.

Pre-K–12Student Coverage
3+Common Windows
CATAdaptive Testing
SS / PRKey Scores
1

What Is Renaissance Star?

Renaissance Star Assessments are short, computer-adaptive assessments used by schools to understand student achievement and growth in reading, math, and early literacy. They are not usually taken on a single national exam date. Instead, each school or district sets its own testing windows.

Star is commonly used for universal screening, benchmark testing, instructional planning, progress monitoring, intervention decisions, student grouping, and growth conversations. Depending on the student and school program, students may take Star Reading, Star Math, Star Early Literacy, Star CBM, or Spanish-language Star assessments.

Important: Star is not a pass/fail exam. A Star score should be interpreted with teacher feedback, classwork, local curriculum data, and the student’s learning history.

For Students

Answer carefully, stay calm, and do your best. Adaptive tests often feel harder as they adjust to your level.

For Parents

Use Star results to understand growth, skill readiness, percentile rank, benchmark category, and areas for support.

For Teachers

Use results to plan groups, set goals, monitor interventions, and connect assessment data to instruction.

2

Renaissance Star 2026–2027 Testing Timetable

Because Renaissance Star is administered through schools and districts, there is no universal public national timetable. The planning table below gives a practical 2026–2027 school-year model. Always follow your own district’s assessment calendar if it differs.

WindowTypical 2026–2027 TimingMain PurposeWho Usually Tests?Result Use
SetupJuly–August 2026Roster classes, check devices, assign tests, review accommodations.School staffReady the school for clean testing data.
Fall BenchmarkAugust–October 2026Beginning-of-year baseline.Most tested studentsGroup students, identify support needs, set goals.
Progress MonitoringOctober–December 2026Check response to intervention.Selected studentsAdjust intervention and targeted support.
Winter BenchmarkJanuary–February 2027Midyear growth check.Most tested studentsCompare fall-to-winter growth and refine instruction.
Spring BenchmarkApril–May 2027End-of-year growth review.Most tested studentsMeasure annual growth and plan summer/next-year support.
Optional SummerJune–August 2027Summer school, intervention, placement, or readiness.Selected programsGuide placement and support after the regular year.

Local-calendar note: A district may use shorter or longer windows, different products, or extra make-up dates. Treat the table as planning guidance, not an official national date list.

\[\text{Annual Star Plan}=\text{Fall Baseline}+\text{Winter Check}+\text{Spring Growth Review}+\text{Progress Monitoring}\]
3

Star Assessment Types

Use the tabs below to compare the major Renaissance Star assessment types.

Star Reading

Used for K–12 reading growth, comprehension, vocabulary, benchmark testing, grouping, and progress monitoring.

Star Math

Used for K–12 math growth and skills across numbers, algebra, geometry, measurement, data analysis, statistics, and probability.

Star Early Literacy

Used mainly for Pre-K–grade 3 early literacy, early numeracy, foundational skill development, and reading readiness.

Star CBM

Used for brief curriculum-based measures and targeted progress monitoring, especially for elementary reading and math skills.

Star Spanish / Star Evaluaciones

Used when schools need Spanish-language evidence for bilingual, emergent bilingual, or dual-language instructional planning.

4

Related Official Renaissance YouTube Video

This official Renaissance YouTube video is useful for setting expectations with students before Star testing.

Video: Product in Action – Renaissance Star Assessments® – Setting expectations with students.

5

Timing, Format & Device Requirements

Star assessments are designed to be efficient. Because the assessment is adaptive, students are not simply answering one long fixed test form; the system selects items based on student responses.

AssessmentCommon Planning TimeFormatTypical DeviceStudent Reminder
Star ReadingOften planned around 20–30 minutesComputer-adaptiveComputer, Chromebook, tablet, or supported deviceRead carefully and avoid rushing.
Star MathApproximately 20–30 minutesComputer-adaptiveComputer or tabletUse scratch paper if allowed.
Star Early LiteracyShort early-learner sessionComputer-adaptive with young-learner supportsComputer or tablet; audio may be usedListen to directions carefully.
Star CBMBrief skill-specific checksCurriculum-based measureOften closely managed by staffFocus on the target skill.
\[\text{Total Student Minutes}=N_{\text{students}}\times N_{\text{tests}}\times M_{\text{average per test}}\]
6

Scores & Growth Formulas

Star reports may include scaled score, benchmark category, percentile rank, grade equivalent, and domain scores. The exact report depends on the assessment and the school/district configuration.

Scaled Score (SS)

Useful for comparing performance over time. It is calculated from item difficulty and correct responses.

Percentile Rank (PR)

Ranges from 1–99 and compares the student with national peers in the same grade.

Benchmark Category

Shows whether performance meets local, district, or state expectations.

Domain Score

Often reported from 0–100 to estimate mastery within a skill domain.

Growth Formula

\[\Delta SS=SS_{\text{current}}-SS_{\text{baseline}}\]
\[\text{Monthly Growth Rate}=\frac{SS_{\text{current}}-SS_{\text{baseline}}}{\text{Months Between Tests}}\]
Domain ScoreCategoryMeaningInstructional Action
0–59BeginningFoundational understanding is still developing.Explicit teaching and guided practice.
60–79DevelopingPartial mastery; reinforcement needed.Small-group review and targeted practice.
80–100SecureLikely ready to apply or extend the skill.Enrichment and application tasks.
7

Interactive Renaissance Star Planning Tools

Tool 1: Star Assessment Finder

Tool 2: Growth Calculator

Tool 3: Testing Block Estimator

8

Student Preparation Guide

Star is not designed for cramming. Preparation should focus on calm testing behavior, steady reading and math habits, and honest effort.

Best Habits

  • Sleep well before testing.
  • Read directions carefully.
  • Do not rush.
  • Use scratch paper if allowed.
  • Keep working even if questions become harder.

Avoid This

  • Do not compare screens with classmates.
  • Do not panic when the test adapts upward.
  • Do not guess randomly unless truly stuck.
  • Do not treat one score as the full story.
9

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Star have fixed dates?

No. Schools and districts set the dates locally.

Is Star timed?

Star is short and efficient, but exact time depends on the assessment, student, and district setup.

Can students study for Star?

Not like a traditional exam. The best preparation is consistent learning, rest, and focus.

What should parents ask?

Ask which assessment was used, what the score means, what skills are strong, and what the next learning step is.

10

Official & Helpful Sources

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