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5.10 Recommended Ways to Use Practice Tests

You now know how to build a practice test. This article covers when to use which practice tests. The same test on EdisonOS can serve very different purposes which are diagnostic, formative practice, module drilling, exam simulation, and final-stretch reinforcement depending on how you assign it. Pick the pattern that fits the moment, and the earlier articles (5.1–5.7) tell you exactly which toggles to flip.

For any new student, start with a Full-Length Test as a diagnostic. This is the single most important habit in the platform.

Assign it with Max Attempts set to 1, Review Mode off, and Show Summary on. Once the student submits, open their Test Report and go straight to the Student Response Review and Session Logs tabs. This is where the student's real gaps surface not in the headline score, but in which question types, topics, and pacing patterns broke down.

From those gaps, build the student's next two weeks of work as targeted Problem Sets (covered in Section 6). If a student lost most of their Reading points on Inference questions, assign a Problem Set of Inference items. If their Math fell apart on the Adaptive Upper section, assign Problem Sets from your harder algebra and advanced math folders. The practice test diagnoses; the Problem Sets treat. This loop of diagnostic test → identify gap → targeted Problem Set → re-test is how the platform is designed to be used.

The Five Patterns

1. Diagnostic.

Full-Length template, Max Attempts 1, Review Mode off, Show Summary on. Use to find gaps and prescribe Problem Sets. Keep Review Mode off so you can re-administer a similar test later to measure growth.

2. Formative Practice with Module Tests.

Use the Module Test template when you want to focus a session on a single subject. A Module Test on EdisonOS runs only one module either Reading & Writing or Math but keeps the full adaptive structure intact: a Baseline Section followed by an Adaptive Upper or Adaptive Lower path based on the student's performance. This makes it the ideal weekly tool half the time commitment of a Full-Length, but the student still experiences real adaptive routing on the subject you are teaching that week. Set Max Attempts to Unlimited, Review Mode on, and Show Summary on. Turn on Question Navigation and Allow Skip at the section level so the student can build self-correction habits.

3. Module Drilling for a Specific Weakness.

Also use the Module Test template, but with a sharper goal. If the diagnostic showed a student is fine on Math but losing 80 points on Reading & Writing, assign a Reading & Writing Module Test and rotate the question folders behind it across attempts to keep content fresh. Enable Untimed Test in Advanced Settings while the student is still building accuracy, then reassign with the timer back on once they are scoring well untimed now the goal is pace. The adaptive Upper/Lower routing inside the Module Test means you do not need separate "easy" and "hard" tests; the platform places the student automatically based on their Baseline performance.

4. Exam Simulation.

Full-Length template, Max Attempts 1, Enforce Section Time Limit on, Allow Resume off, Schedule Test on with a fixed date. Turn Show Summary off so you debrief the report with the student before the number lands. This is your test-day rehearsal.

5. Final-Stretch Reinforcement.

Pull from the EdisonOS Library for fresh content, Max Attempts Unlimited, Review Mode on, keep Enforce Section Time Limit on. Watch Session Logs for pacing issues they are fixable in days.

Full-Length vs Module Test: A Quick Rule of Thumb

Full-Length Test

Module Test

When to use

When you need a complete picture

When the goal is focused improvement in one module

Best for

Diagnostics, exam simulations, overall score checks, stamina building

Week-to-week tutoring, targeted subject work

Structure

Both Reading & Writing and Math, each with Baseline + Adaptive sections

One module (R&W or Math) with Baseline + Adaptive sections

Adaptive routing

Yes, on both modules

Yes on the selected module

Time commitment

~2 hr 14 min (full exam length)

About half

Typical goal

Measure where the student stands overall

Move the needle on a specific weakness

The key point: Module Tests are not a "lite" version of the Full-Length they keep the full Baseline + Adaptive structure of a real exam, just on one module. That is what makes them the right tool for most weekly sessions.

Habits That Make the Difference

Always Preview before you Assign. Catching a wrong folder before students see it costs two minutes; catching it after costs you the test.

Use Notes to Tutors. Two months from now, the tutor onboarding a new student will thank you for "Use after a tough diagnostic" instead of guessing.

Reuse tests across the journey. The same test can be a diagnostic in week one and a confidence-builder in week ten same questions, different assignment settings, completely different purpose.

Teach from the report, not the score. The reports from the practice test is where teaching happens. Pick two or three patterns from it and build your next tutoring session and the next Problem Set around them.

Where to Go Next

The practice test tells you what a student is missing. The next step, Problem Sets (Section 6), is how you close those gaps one topic at a time.