Standardized tests aren't the enemy. They're a tool. They tell you where your child stands relative to grade-level expectations, they identify gaps you might have missed, and for high schoolers, they're a ticket to college admissions and scholarships.
AI makes test prep efficient and free.
The Free Test Prep Stack
Khan Academy + SAT: Khan Academy has an official partnership with the College Board for SAT prep. It's free, personalized, and genuinely effective. Your teen takes a diagnostic, and Khan creates a custom study plan. This alone is worth hundreds of dollars in test prep courses.
AI for unlimited practice: The weakness of any test prep program is limited practice problems. AI generates unlimited ones:
AI for error analysis: When your student gets questions wrong, AI diagnoses why:
For Younger Students: ITBS/State Assessment Prep
If you test your younger children annually (required in some states, optional in others), AI generates practice in the right format:
Two weeks of 15-minute daily practice sessions before the test is usually enough to familiarize your child with the format without causing test anxiety. The goal isn't drilling. It's comfort with the format so the test measures what they know, not how well they handle an unfamiliar testing situation.
The Anti-Anxiety Approach
Many homeschool kids haven't taken a timed, standardized test before. That unfamiliarity can tank scores that don't reflect actual knowledge. Practice the format, not just the content. Time a few practice sessions so they know what 60 minutes feels like. Normalize it: "This is just a way to see what you know. There's no grade. It doesn't change anything about our school."
Tests should inform your teaching, not stress your family. AI makes prep painless enough that it can stay that way.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can AI help prepare for standardized tests?
AI is excellent for test prep. It can generate practice questions in any subject, explain concepts in multiple ways, create timed practice sessions, and identify areas where your child needs additional review.
What standardized tests should homeschoolers prepare for?
Common tests include the Iowa Assessments and Stanford Achievement Test for annual evaluation, PSAT and SAT/ACT for college-bound high schoolers, and AP exams for advanced credit.
How far in advance should we start test prep?
For annual standardized assessments, 2-4 weeks of light review is usually sufficient for students who have been learning consistently. For college entrance exams like the SAT or ACT, 3-6 months of preparation is recommended.