New Hampshire | NH SAS Mathematics | Grade 5

How Does the 5th Grade NH SAS Math Test Work? Understanding the Score (2026 Guide)

A Grade 5 NH SAS Math 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?

NH SAS Mathematics, officially named New Hampshire Statewide Assessment System (NH SAS) Mathematics, is New Hampshire's statewide math assessment for grades 3-8, reported with statewide performance cut scores (NH SAS Cut Scores) The NH SAS administration manual lists estimated mathematics testing times of 30 minutes for modular/benchmark, 60 minutes for interim, and 2 hours 15 minutes for summative (NH SAS Test Administration Manual) Students test through the NH SAS secure browser using district-managed test settings and accommodations.

Item Type Tutorials are provided so students can practice the platform and item interactions before test day. For Grade 5 content, NH SAS Math is aligned to New Hampshire's grade level mathematics standards across core domains such as Operations and Algebraic Thinking, Number and Operations (including fractions), Measurement and Data, and Geometry.

Is NH SAS Math adaptive?

Yes. The manual explicitly notes the assessment is adaptive and that students answer one question before moving to the next. That adaptive flow makes foundational accuracy critical because early errors can limit exposure to harder content later in the test.

What does the score actually mean?

Official score ranges in this guide come from New Hampshire's published NH SAS cut score tables. The Scale Score provides an overall performance estimate by integrating responses across different difficulty levels. This should be read as more than a simple percent correct number. The score reflects both how accurately the student responded and the difficulty level the student handled consistently during the session. Schools map the reported score to official cut score levels for grade level interpretation and formal reporting. The level ranges listed here come directly from the state's published score range table. The test reported ranges are in the official level table, while the percentile table is designed as a simpler planning model.

To get the exact percentile for any score, use the NH SAS Mathematics Score Tool.

Score Levels

LevelScale Score RangeExplanation
Intervention320-459Below grade level target right now
On Track460-494Close to grade level, but still not fully consistent
Proficient495-521Meeting grade level expectations
Advanced522-660Exceeding grade level expectations

Parent-Friendly Percentile Buckets

Support BandPercentileScale Score RangeMeaning
Intervention< 21st percentile320-459Stop and rebuild missing foundation skills first so the student can move into harder question layers
On Track21st-40th percentile460-494Close to grade level, but needs steadier foundational accuracy to reach higher-difficulty layers more consistently
Proficient41st-75th percentile495-521Good base, now push multi step accuracy so the student can sustain performance on harder adaptive items
Advanced> 75th percentile522-660Strong result, so enrichment such as math olympiads is a good next step to build higher level problem solving depth

What is a good score?

A practical minimum target is Proficient (495-521). For higher readiness confidence, most students should aim at upper Proficient and above. In many leading school settings, upper Proficient and Advanced ranges include a large share of students, so those bands are usually the target. Growth continues to matter most in lower bands because improvement from below grade level to proficiency is usually incremental across cycles.

Top percentile students usually experience smaller gains, so high consistency and richer problem solving are often better targets.

What does this mean in practice?

Here is how the score bands translate into actual item examples. For basic stability, a practical target is around 60% accuracy, but stepping into the next band usually requires meaningfully better accuracy. For NH SAS Math, this progression is most useful when questions are grouped in order: one grade lower, early same grade, late same grade, then next grade readiness.

1. Intervention | One grade lower skill | 320-459

A school has 489 students. They want to give each student 2 pencils. The pencils come in boxes of 100. About how many boxes should they buy?

Standard: 4.OA.A.3

Band level focus: one grade lower foundation skills that often block current grade fluency

Grade 5 New Hampshire NH SAS Math | 6-Week Test Prep | Scale Score 320-660

Practical prep advice

For NH SAS Math Grade 5, foundational gaps have to be fixed in order. In an adaptive test, weak accuracy on one layer can prevent a student from reaching the next layer consistently. That is why prep should start from the lowest missing grade skill and move up step by step. If the base is shaky, students usually spend the whole test recovering instead of showing what they can do at higher difficulty.

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 New Hampshire NH SAS Math | 6-Week Test Prep | Scale Score 320-660 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 New Hampshire NH SAS Math

NH SAS Mathematics Score Tool

NH SAS Cut Scores (education.nh.gov)

NH SAS Test Administration Manual (nh.portal.cambiumast.com)