How do I prepare for
the TExES Core
Subjects EC-6 ELAR (901) exam?
To ensure you are fully
prepared, follow
this
structured approach using the Certify Teacher test prep platform:
1. Benchmark Your Readiness
A strong indicator that you are prepared to pass the
official
exam is consistently scoring 90% or higher on three
consecutive full-length Certify Teacher practice tests. To
ensure your knowledge is fresh and peak readiness is
maintained, aim to achieve this benchmark within the final two
weeks leading up to your test date.
2. Follow a Targeted Study Plan
-
Enable the Study Plan Tracker feature in your
account.
-
Next, take a full-length practice exam.
-
Complete the assignments generated in your
Study Plan to address areas you need improvement. Dive into the specific topics you
need to master with content‑focused, short video lessons and quizzes listed in your
Study Plan. No wasted time—you study only what moves your score to the top.
3. Learn from Every Question
For every practice test question—whether answered
correctly
or incorrectly—thoroughly read the explanatory commentaries
for all answer choices. Understanding why wrong answers are
incorrect is just as important as knowing why the right answer
is correct. These rationales often clarify key concepts and skills
that will appear on the actual exam.
By leveraging all the resources available in your Certify
Teacher preparation, you can approach your TExES exam on test day with confidence and pass on
the first try.
Who can take the TExES
Core Subjects
EC-6 ELAR (901) exam?
To be eligible for Texas teacher
certification,
candidates must complete a TEA-approved educator
preparation program (EPP) and hold at least a
bachelor's degree from an institution accredited by an agency recognized by the Texas Higher Education
Coordinating
Board (THECB). The traditional path for earning a teaching certificate in Texas as an
undergraduate includes:
- Completing a bachelor's degree with a teacher preparation
component.
- Passing the required teacher certification exams.
- Applying for a teaching certificate or license.
There are alternative pathways for those who
have a
bachelor's degree outside of education. There are educator preparation programs (EPP) that offer
alternative pathways to certification for both classroom and administrative positions. These EPP
programs can streamline a career change to classroom teaching if you have a bachelor's degree.
Alternative certification programs can commonly be completed in one year as a post-graduate
certificate.
How is the TExES Core
Subjects EC-6
ELAR (901) exam scored?
Your raw score, which is the
total number
of
correctly answered questions on the exam, is converted to a scaled score (100-300) through a
statistical process called equating, which accounts for minor difficulty variations between test
forms, ensures fairness across different test administrations, and maintains consistent passing
standards over time.
All questions carry equal
weight, and
there's no penalty for guessing
(meaning: wrong answers don't count against you), therefore answer every question; make your
best educated guess if uncertain. The minimum passing score is 240. Results are typically
available 7 business days after testing.
Is the TExES Core
Subjects EC-6 ELAR
(901) exam hard?
Yes, the ELAR 901 exam is
generally
considered
challenging, but it is also very passable with the right preparation. It's not designed to trick
you, but it is designed to ensure you have a deep and comprehensive understanding of the English
language arts and reading concepts you will be responsible for teaching. The perceived
difficulty often comes from two factors:
-
The breadth of content it covers
-
The depth of understanding required, moving beyond basic knowledge to application and
analysis
Understanding the content
is only half the
battle.
Knowing how that knowledge will be tested on the real exam is what leads to success. Certify
Teacher specializes in this. We close that gap by providing you with official full-length
practice exams that are never repeated, an assessment system that evaluates your performance on
the practice tests, pinpoints your areas of weaknesses and generates Study Plans to ensure you
master every concept. Certify Teacher provides the definitive advantage with a complete
preparation system.
Content tested on the
TExES Core
Subjects EC-6 ELAR (901) exam.
The exam includes 10
competencies that assess core principles of reading, writing, and language development. Here's a
detailed breakdown of these competencies:
Competency 001—(Oral
Language):The teacher understands
the importance
of oral
language, knows the developmental processes of oral language, and provides students with
varied opportunities to develop listening and speaking skills.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Knows and teaches basic linguistic concepts and the developmental stages in the
acquisition of oral
language—including phonology, semantics, syntax (subject-verb agreement and
subject-verb
inversion),
and pragmatics—as appropriate for students in grades 4–6 and recognizes that
individual
variations
occur within and across languages.
-
B.
Plans and implements systematic oral language instruction based on informal and
formal assessment of
all students, including English learners; fosters oral language development; and
addresses students'
individual needs, strengths, and interests in grades 4–6.
-
C.
Designs a variety of one-on-one and group activities (e.g., having discussions,
questioning, sharing
information) to build on students' current oral language skills.
-
D.
Selects and uses instructional materials and strategies for students in grades 4–6
that respond to
students' individual needs, strengths, and interests; reflect cultural diversity;
and
build on students'
cultural, linguistic, and home backgrounds to enhance their oral language
development.
-
E.
Provides instruction that interrelates oral and written language to promote
students'
reading and writing
proficiencies.
-
F.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, activities, and models to
teach
students in grades 4–
6 skills for speaking to various audiences for various purposes and for adapting
spoken
language for
various audiences, purposes, and occasions.
-
G.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, activities, and models to
teach
students listening
skills for various purposes (e.g., critical listening to evaluate a speaker's
message,
listening to enjoy and
appreciate spoken language) and provides students with opportunities to engage in
active, purposeful
listening in a variety of contexts.
-
H.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, activities, and models to
teach
students in grades 4–
6 to evaluate the content and effectiveness of their own spoken messages and the
messages of others.
Competency
002—(Word
Analysis and Identification Skills): The teacher understands the importance of word analysis
and identification skills for reading comprehension and provides many opportunities for
students to practice and improve
these skills.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Uses a variety of instructional approaches and materials to promote students' phonetic,
graphophonemic, and morphophonemic knowledge as outlined in the Texas Essential
Knowledge and
Skills (TEKS) for grades 4–6.
-
B.
Understands the importance of word recognition skills (e.g., structural analysis,
identifying and reading
high-frequency words from a research-based list, contextual analysis) for reading
comprehension and
knows a variety of strategies for helping students in grades 4–6 develop and apply word
analysis skills,
including identifying, categorizing, and using common synonyms, antonyms, homographs,
homophones,
and analogies.
-
C.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, activities, and models to teach
students in grades 4–
6 to read high-frequency words, to promote the students' ability to decode increasingly
complex words,
and to enhance word identification skills of students who read at varying levels.
-
D.
Knows and teaches strategies for decoding increasingly complex words, including advanced
vowelsound combinations, structural or morphological elements (e.g., prefixes, suffixes,
roots, base words),
and syllable types and syllable division patterns, and for using syntax and semantics to
support word
identification and confirm word meaning for students in grades 4–6.
-
E.
Understands the value of using dictionaries, glossaries, and other sources to determine
the meanings,
usage, pronunciations, correct spelling, and derivations of unfamiliar words and teaches
students in
grades 4–6 how to use these sources.
-
F.
Understands how to foster collaboration with families and with other professionals to
promote all
students' skills in word analysis and identification.
Competency
003—(Reading Fluency): The teacher understands the importance of fluency for reading
comprehension and
provides many opportunities for students to improve their reading fluency.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Knows the relationship between reading fluency and comprehension for students in grades
4–6.
-
B.
Understands that fluency involves rate, accuracy, prosody, and intonation and knows the
norms for
reading fluency that have been established by the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills
(TEKS) for
grades 4–6.
-
C.
Understands the connection of word identification skills and reading fluency to reading
comprehension
for students in grades 4–6.
-
D.
Understands differences in students' development of word identification skills and
reading fluency and
knows instructional practices for meeting students' individual needs in those areas for
students in grades
4–6.
-
E.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, and activities to develop and
improve fluency for
students in grades 4–6.
-
F.
Knows how to teach students in grades 4–6 strategies for reading books independently,
including the
use of technology to support grade-level content.
-
G.
Provides students with opportunities to engage in silent reading and extended reading of
a wide range of
materials, including informational texts and texts from various literary genres, as
outlined in the Texas
Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for grades 4–6.
-
H.
Uses strategies to encourage reading for pleasure and lifelong learning.
-
I.
Recognizes the interrelationship between reading fluency and the other components of
reading for
students in grades 4–6.
-
J.
Understands how to foster collaboration with families and with other professionals to
promote all
students' reading fluency in grades 4–6.
Competency
004—(Reading Comprehension and Applications): The teacher understands the importance of
reading for
understanding, knows the components and processes of reading comprehension, and teaches
students strategies for
improving their comprehension, including using a variety of texts and contexts.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Understands factors affecting reading comprehension (e.g., word analysis skills, prior
knowledge,
language background/experience, previous reading experiences, fluency, vocabulary
development,
ability to monitor understanding, characteristics of specific texts) for students in
grades 4–6.
-
B.
Understands levels of reading comprehension and knows how to model and teach skills for
literal
comprehension (e.g., identifying stated main idea, recalling details, identifying point
of view), inferential
comprehension (e.g., inferring themes, making predictions), and evaluative comprehension
(e.g.,
analyzing character development, detecting faulty reasoning) for students in grades 4–6.
-
C.
Provides instruction in comprehension skills that support the transition of students in
grades 4–6 from
"learning to read" to "reading to learn" (e.g., setting a purpose for reading; applying
knowledge of text
structures; using text features such as pronunciation guides, introductions, and
sidebars) to become selfdirected, critical readers.
-
D.
Uses various instructional strategies to enhance reading comprehension (e.g., linking
text content to
students' lives and prior knowledge, connecting related ideas across different texts,
comparing different
versions of the same story, explaining the meaning of common idioms and adages, engaging
students in
guided and independent reading, guiding students to generate questions and apply
knowledge of text
topics) for students in grades 4–6.
-
E.
Knows and teaches strategies that facilitate comprehension of different types of texts
(e.g., literary,
informational, argumentative) before, during, and after reading (e.g., previewing,
making predictions,
questioning, self-monitoring, rereading, mapping, using reading journals, discussing
texts) for students in
grades 4–6.
-
F.
Knows and teaches strategies that facilitate making connections between and across
multiple texts (e.g.,
summarizing and paraphrasing, locating and distinguishing between facts and opinions,
determining
whether a text supports or opposes an issue) for students in grades 4–6.
-
G.
Understands metacognitive skills, including self-evaluation and self-monitoring skills,
and teaches
students to use those skills to enhance their reading comprehension in grades 4–6.
-
H.
Knows how to provide students in grades 4–6 with systematic, explicit instruction and
reinforcing
activities to promote the use of strategies to improve their reading comprehension
(e.g., previewing, selfmonitoring, visualizing, summarizing).
-
I.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, and activities to guide students'
understanding of
their own culture and the cultures of others through reading in grades 4–6.
-
J.
Understands and teaches the features of various literary genres, including folktales,
fables, legends,
myths, realistic fiction, historical fiction, tall tales, drama, and poetry, and
promotes the development of
literary response and analysis skills by providing multiple opportunities for students
in grades 4–6 to
listen to and respond to literature and to interact with others about literature.
-
K.
Knows the difference between guided and independent practice in reading and provides
students in
grades 4–6 with frequent opportunities for both.
-
L.
Understands how to foster collaboration with families and with other professionals to
promote all
students' reading comprehension in grades 4–6.
Competency
005—(Vocabulary Development): The teacher knows the importance of vocabulary development and
applies
that knowledge to teach reading, listening, speaking, and writing.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Knows how to provide explicit, systematic instruction and reinforcing activities to help
students in grades
4–6 increase their vocabulary.
-
B.
Knows how to use formal and informal methods to effectively teach vocabulary to students
in grades 4–
6.
-
C.
Selects and uses a wide range of instructional materials (e.g., literary, informational,
argumentative,
multimodal, and digital texts), strategies, and opportunities with rich contextual
support for vocabulary
development for students in grades 4–6.
-
D.
Recognizes the importance of selecting, teaching, and modeling a wide range of general
and specialized
vocabularies for students in grades 4–6.
-
E.
Understands how to assess and monitor vocabulary knowledge for students in grades 4–6 by
providing
systematic, age-appropriate instruction and reinforcing activities (e.g., morphemic
analysis, etymology,
use of graphic organizers, contextual analysis, multiple exposures to a word in various
contexts).
-
F.
Provides multiple opportunities to listen to, read, and respond to various types of
literary and
informational texts to promote the vocabulary development of students in grades 4–6.
Competency
006—(Reading, Inquiry, and Research): The teacher understands the importance of inquiry and
research
skills to students' academic success and provides instruction that promotes students'
acquisition and effective use of
these skills in the content areas.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Teaches students how to develop open-ended research questions and a plan (e.g.,
timeline) to locate,
retrieve, and record information from a range of primary and secondary sources.
-
B.
Selects and uses instructional strategies to help students comprehend abstract content
and ideas in
written materials (e.g., examples, graphic organizers).
-
C.
Selects and uses instructional strategies to teach students to interpret information
presented in various
formats (e.g., maps, tables, graphs) and how to locate, retrieve, and record information
from
technologies, print resources, and experts.
-
D.
Selects and uses instructional strategies to help students use inquiry and research
skills across the
curriculum (e.g., brainstorming to generate questions and topics; locating, organizing,
evaluating,
summarizing, paraphrasing, and communicating information; differentiating between
primary and
secondary sources; selecting and using relevant, credible sources).
-
E.
Knows grade-level expectations for inquiry and research skills outlined in the Texas
Essential Knowledge
and Skills (TEKS) (e.g., in fourth and fifth grades, develop and follow a research plan
with adult
assistance; in sixth grade, refine the major research question through use of secondary
questions).
-
F.
Provides instruction to develop a topic sentence, summarize findings, and use evidence
to support
conclusions.
-
G.
Understands how to foster collaboration with peers, with families, and with other
professionals to
promote all students' ability to develop effective inquiry and research skills in the
content areas.
Competency
007—(Writing Conventions): The teacher understands the conventions of writing in English and
provides
instruction that helps students develop proficiency in applying writing conventions.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Understands that many students go through predictable stages in acquiring writing
conventions (e.g.,
physical and cognitive processes involved in word writing, sentence construction,
spelling, punctuation,
grammatical expression) and that individual students vary in their rates of development
of those
conventions.
-
B.
Provides spelling instruction and gives students opportunities to use and develop
spelling skills in the
context of meaningful written expression (e.g., commonly confused terms, simple and
complex
contractions).
-
C.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, and hands-on activities for
developing graphomotor
skills necessary for writing, according to grade-level expectations in the Texas
Essential Knowledge and
Skills (TEKS) for grades 4–6.
-
D.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, and activities to help students
use English writing
conventions (e.g., grammar, capitalization, punctuation) in connected discourse.
-
E.
Recognizes the similarities and differences between spoken and written English (e.g.,
syntax, vocabulary
choice, audience) and uses instructional strategies to help students apply English
writing conventions
and enhance their own writing.
-
F.
Knows writing conventions and appropriate grammar and usage and provides students with
direct
instruction and structured practice in those areas.
-
G.
Selects and uses instructional strategies, materials, and activities to teach correct
pencil grip.
Competency
008—(Written Communication): The teacher understands that writing to communicate is a
developmental
process and provides instruction that promotes students' competence in written
communication.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Teaches purposeful, meaningful writing in connection with listening, reading, and
speaking.
-
B.
Knows how to promote students' development of an extensive reading and writing
vocabulary by
providing students with many opportunities to read and write.
-
C.
Monitors students' writing development and provides motivational instruction that
addresses individual
students' needs, strengths, and interests.
-
D.
Understands differences between first-draft writing and writing for publication and
provides instruction in
various stages of writing, including prewriting, drafting, revising (including both
self-revision and peer
revision), and editing.
-
E.
Understands the benefits of technology for teaching basic writing skills and writing for
publication and
provides instruction in the use of technology to facilitate written communication.
-
F.
Understands writing for a variety of audiences, purposes, and settings and provides
students with
opportunities to write for various audiences, purposes, and settings and in various
voices and styles.
-
G.
Teaches students to use appropriate conventions to support ideas in writing and to use
an appropriate
form of documentation to acknowledge sources (e.g., quotations, bibliographical
information,
differentiation between paraphrasing and plagiarism).
-
H.
Knows grade-level expectations for written communication as described in the Texas
Essential
Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for grades 4–6.
-
I.
Understands how to foster collaboration with families and with other professionals to
promote students'
development of writing skills.
Competency
009—(Viewing and Representing): The teacher understands skills for interpreting, analyzing,
evaluating, and
producing visual images and messages in various types of media, including electronic media,
and provides students with
opportunities to develop skills in this area.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Knows grade-level expectations for viewing and representing visual images and messages
as described
in the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for grades 4–6.
-
B.
Understands and teaches the characteristics and functions of different types of media
(e.g., film, print)
and knows how different types of media influence and inform.
-
C.
Teaches students to compare and contrast print, visual, and electronic media, including
the level of
formality of each (e.g., email, Web-based news article, blogs).
-
D.
Teaches students to evaluate how visual image makers (e.g., illustrators, documentary
filmmakers,
political cartoonists, news photographers) represent messages and meanings and provides
students with
opportunities to interpret and evaluate visual images in various media.
-
E.
Knows how to teach students to analyze visual image makers' choices (e.g., style,
elements, media) and
evaluate how those choices help represent or extend meaning.
-
F.
Provides students with opportunities to interpret events and ideas based on information
from maps,
charts, graphics, video segments, and technology presentations and to use media to
compare ideas and
points of view.
-
G.
Knows steps and procedures for teaching students to produce visual images and messages
with various
meanings to communicate with others.
-
H.
Teaches students how to select, organize, and produce visuals to complement and extend
meanings.
-
I.
Provides students with opportunities to use technology for producing various types of
communications
(e.g., class newspapers, multimedia reports, video reports) and helps students analyze
how language,
medium, and presentation contribute to the message.
-
J.
Understands how to foster collaboration with families and with other professionals to
promote students'
development of media literacy.
Competency
010—(Assessment of Developing Literacy): The teacher understands the basic principles of
literacy
assessment and uses a variety of assessments to guide literacy instruction.
The beginning
teacher:
-
A.
Knows how to select and administer formative and summative assessments to students in
grades 4–6
and use results to measure literacy skills (e.g., word analysis and word identification
skills, fluency,
comprehension, writing conventions, written communications, visual images, inquiry
skills) and address
individual students' needs identified in informal and formal assessments.
-
B.
Knows the characteristics of informal and formal reading comprehension assessments
(e.g., criterionreferenced state tests, curriculum-based reading assessments, informal
reading inventories, normreferenced tests).
-
C.
Analyzes students' reading and writing performance and uses the information as a basis
for instruction in
grades 4–6.
-
D.
Knows the state content and performance standards for reading, writing, listening, and
speaking that
constitute the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) and recognizes when a student
needs
additional help or intervention to bring the student's performance up to grade level for
students in grades
4–6.
-
E.
Knows how to determine students' independent, instructional, and frustration reading
levels and uses the
information to select appropriate materials for individual students and to guide
students' selection of
independent reading materials in grades 4–6.
-
F.
Uses ongoing assessments to determine when a student may be in need of classroom
intervention or
specialized reading instruction and to develop appropriate instructional plans for
students in grades 4–6.
-
G.
Understands the use of writing in assessment of students and provides opportunities for
students to selfassess and peer-assess writing (e.g., for clarity, interest to audience,
comprehensiveness) and their
ongoing literacy development.
-
H.
Knows how to select, administer, and use results from informal and formal assessments of
literacy skills
for students in grades 4–6.
-
I.
Analyzes students' errors in reading and responds to individual students' needs by
providing focused
instruction to promote literacy skills.
-
J.
Knows informal and formal procedures for assessing students' use of writing conventions
and uses
multiple, ongoing assessments to monitor and evaluate students' development in that
area.
-
K.
Uses ongoing assessments of writing conventions to determine when students need
additional help or
intervention to bring students' performance to grade level based on state content and
performance
standards for writing in the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for grades 4–6.
-
L.
Analyzes students' errors in applying writing conventions and uses the results of the
analysis as a basis
for future instruction for students in grades 4–6.
-
M.
Selects and uses a variety of formal and informal procedures for monitoring students'
reading
comprehension and adjusts instruction to meet the needs of individual students,
including English
learners, for students in grades 4–6.
-
N.
Understands how to foster collaboration with families and how to communicate information
about
students' progress and ongoing literacy development to parents/caregivers and to other
professionals
through a variety of means, including the use of examples of students' work, for
students in grades 4–6.
What if I don't pass
my TExES exam?
If you don't follow Certify Teacher's
recommendations for test preparation then most likely you will not pass your TExES exam. Here's
the Texas Education Agency's policy for retaking exams.
If you are unable to pass your TExES exam on your
first attempt, you may retake the exam 4 more times for a total of 5 attempts per exam. An exam
can be retaken after 30 days from the date of the last attempt. If your exam is made up of
subject subsets like the Core Subjects EC-6 that includes 5 of them, and you did not pass one or
more of the subsets, you are eligible to retake only the subset(s) you did not pass instead of
retaking the whole exam.
If you are unable to successfully pass the
examination after five attempts, you will not be allowed to take the examination again unless
the Texas Education Agency approves a test-limit
waiver. However,
before you can apply to this waiver to attempt the exam a sixth time you must satisfy the waiver
requirements. Click this link
to download the
waiver application. Section D of the waiver applies to all TExES exams and determines
the number of clock-hours of educational activity you must complete before you can submit the
waiver application to be approved by TEA. Click this link
for help
filling
out the waiver application.
Once you have determined the number of clock-hours, the
next step is to look for educational activities that will provide you with the knowledge and
skills you need, based on your Deficit Competency Analysis, to be successful on your waiver
attempt. But you need to look no further because Certify Teacher is a TEA-Approved CPE provider
and we will be able to help you with meeting this requirement of your waiver application
successfully. Write sales@certifyteacher.com for
more
information.