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Assessment Requirements in North Carolina

What’s required

North Carolina requires homeschooled students to complete a standardized test. This is required annually.

What happens if your child doesn’t meet the minimum

North Carolina hasn’t defined a specific remediation process for students who score below the minimum. If your child’s scores fall short, we recommend reaching out to your local school district to understand what steps, if any, they expect. In most cases, this is a conversation, not a confrontation.

Approved tests

Your state does not publish a specific list of approved tests. The following nationally normed standardized tests are widely accepted across states:

  • Iowa Assessments (ITBS)
  • Stanford Achievement Test (SAT-10)
  • California Achievement Test (CAT)
  • Peabody Individual Achievement Test (PIAT)
  • Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement
  • MAP (Measures of Academic Progress)

Many of these can be administered at home or through a local testing service. Your homeschool co-op or state organization may also coordinate group testing dates.

Alternatives to standardized testing

Standardized testing is the primary assessment option under this pathway. If your child experiences test anxiety or has a learning difference, check your full state guide . Your state may offer alternative pathways with different assessment methods.

Get your personalized plan

Every family’s situation is a little different. Our free wizard builds a step-by-step compliance plan tailored to your family, including exactly which assessments you need and when they’re due.

Get Your Personalized Plan

Source: N.C.G.S. 115C-549; N.C.G.S. 115C-557 (via 115C-564)