The Craylands School SATs Information 

SATs in Year 6 

At The Craylands School, we ensure that our Year 6 students are well-prepared for the SATs tests, which are a crucial part of their educational journey. SATs assess the progress and attainment of children in Year 6, helping us understand their academic development and readiness for the next stage of education. 
 
With the national curriculum review, traditional levels have been replaced by scaled scores, which are now used to report the outcomes of national curriculum tests. Scaled scores offer a consistent way to report test results from year to year, even if the tests themselves vary slightly in difficulty. 

SATs for Key Stage 2 (Year 6) 

Reporting on these assessments 

As part of the national curriculum review, levels have been abolished. From 2016, we will use scaled scores to report national curriculum test outcomes. 

Scaled Scores 

The move to scaled scores was announced as part of the previous government’s response to the consultation on reforming assessment and accountability for primary schools. 
 
Scaled scores are used all over the world. They help test results to be reported consistently from one year to the next. We design national curriculum tests to be as similar as possible year on year, but slight differences in difficulty will occur between years. Scaled scores maintain their meaning over time so that two pupils achieving the same scaled score on two different tests will have demonstrated the same attainment. For example, on our scale 100 will always represent the ‘national standard’. However, due to the small differences in difficulty between tests, the ‘raw score’ (ie the total number of correct responses) that equates to 100 might be different (though similar) each year. 
 
We can’t give full information about what the scale will look like yet. We need to wait until pupils have taken the tests and the tests have been marked before we can set the national standard and the rest of the scale. We can’t set the scale in advance; this cohort is the first that has reached the end of key stage 2 having studied sufficient content from the new national curriculum. If we were to set the scale using data from pupils that had studied the old national curriculum, it is likely it would be incorrect. 

Interpreting scaled scores 

A pupil’s scaled score will be based on their raw score. The raw score is the total number of marks a pupil receives in a test, based on the number of questions they answered correctly. The pupil’s raw score will be translated into a scaled score using a conversion table. A pupil who achieves the national standard will have demonstrated sufficient knowledge in the areas assessed by the tests. This will mean that they are well placed to succeed in the next phase of their education. 

Our Latest SATs Results