Georgia | Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) | Grade 5

How Does the 5th Grade Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) Math Test Work? Understanding the Score (2026 Guide)

A Grade 5 Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) result is most useful when it is translated into specific growth priorities. This guide explains how the test works and what the score signals for instruction. This guide helps parents, teachers, and tutors understand how the test works, what the score means, and what to do next.

How does the test work?

The Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) is a comprehensive summative assessment program designed to measure student mastery of state-adopted content standards in Georgia (Georgia Milestones End-of-Grade Score Interpretation Guide).

The assessment serves as a key component of the state's student assessment program for students in grades 3 through 8 Georgia Milestones Grade 3 (EOG Assessment Guide). The mathematics assessment consists of multiple-choice, technology-enhanced, and constructed-response items. Tests are primarily administered online, though paper-and-pencil versions are available as accommodations for specific student needs. The assessment blueprint is aligned with grade level math standards and reporting domains, so score interpretation should include domain strengths and gaps.

Is Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) adaptive?

No. The Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) mathematics assessment is a fixed-form test where students in the same grade level respond to the same set of items.

What does the score actually mean?

Students receive a Scale Score that is used to classify performance into one of four achievement levels. The results are used to provide information on student readiness for the next grade level and to inform promotion or retention decisions in specific grades. This test reports a Scale Score built from counted item performance. Operational questions contribute to the result, and the test converts that performance into a common scale so scores can be compared fairly across forms and years. In plain terms, this is more than a simple classroom percentage. The scale score represents how strong the student's grade level math performance was on the official assessment.

Schools use official cut score levels to interpret the reported score at grade level and report results formally. These official ranges are drawn from the state's published score range table. Use the official level table for test reported ranges, and the percentile table for a simpler planning conversation with parents and tutors.

To get the exact percentile for any score, use the Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) Score Tool.

Score Levels

LevelScale Score RangeExplanation
Intervention245-474Below grade level target right now
On Track475-524Close to grade level, but still not fully consistent
Proficient525-589Meeting grade level expectations
Advanced590+Exceeding grade level expectations

Parent-Friendly Percentile Buckets

Support BandPercentileScale Score RangeMeaning
Intervention< 21st percentile245-474Stop and rebuild significant foundation gaps before moving forward
On Track21st-40th percentile475-524Close to grade level, but needs more consistent practice time to fully clear grade level skills
Proficient41st-75th percentile525-589Good base, now aim for stronger scores with better mixed and multi step accuracy
Advanced> 75th percentile590+Very strong result, so enrichment such as math olympiads can build advanced reasoning and problem solving strength

What is a good score?

A practical minimum target is Proficient (525-589). For more reliable readiness, most students should target the top of Proficient or Advanced. Because many high performing schools have many students in upper Proficient or Advanced ranges, families pursuing those schools generally target those bands. Students in lower ranges still need growth the most, because reaching proficiency from below grade level is usually not a one cycle jump.

For students already high in percentile rank, growth compression is normal, so the better target is consistency plus deeper problem solving.

What does this mean in practice?

The examples below show what each score band looks like in real questions. A useful benchmark is roughly 60% accuracy for basic band stability, though advancing to the next band typically takes substantially higher accuracy. For Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS), this progression is most useful when questions are grouped in order: one grade lower, early same grade, late same grade, then next grade readiness.

Practical prep advice

For Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) Grade 5, foundational gaps are crucial. Early and mid level questions are where stable scores are built, so weak accuracy there makes it harder to recover later in the test. Confidence matters during the test. When students miss too many early questions, stress rises quickly and performance usually drops, so start from the lowest missing grade skill and build upward in order.

Questions tend to be similar year over year, so practicing similar questions helps a lot and gives students confidence on test day when they recognize formats they already practiced.

That is why our Grade 5 Georgia Milestones Math | 6-Week Test Prep | Scale Score 245-590+ is organized by percentile bands and domains. It helps parents, teachers, and tutors identify the lowest missing grade skill quickly and map practice to target score ranges and state percentile bands.

Sources

Grade 5 Georgia Milestones Math

Georgia Milestones Assessment System (GMAS) Score Tool

Georgia Milestones End-of-Grade Score Interpretation Guide (lor2.gadoe.org)