For Liam, that permission changed his year. Placed in the right track, he passed algebra with a B. "I don't love math now," he admits. "But I don't hate myself in math class anymore."
But does it work? And more importantly, does it actually help the student who has been left behind—or the one who is bored out of their gifted mind? At its core, the Power Up Placement Test is a diagnostic tool. Unlike standardized achievement tests (which measure what you already learned) or aptitude tests (which try to guess what you might learn), a placement test asks a single, honest question: "Where are you right now, so we can help you get where you need to go?" power up placement test
Maya, on the other hand, reads at a college level but gets bored in English class. Her previous placement test maxed out at 12th-grade questions. Since she answered them all correctly, the system assumed she had "no gaps." In reality, she had no engagement . For Liam, that permission changed his year
When Liam took the Power Up test, he failed the first algebra question. But instead of marking him "remedial" and moving on, the test backed up. It discovered he never truly understood negative integers—a concept from two grades earlier. The test spent 10 minutes reteaching that concept in a visual, low-pressure format. His final placement wasn't "Basic Math." It was a custom track: Foundations of Algebra with Integrated Number Sense. "But I don't hate myself in math class anymore