The Free i-Ready Score Growth Tracker Tool – Track Your Child’s Growth

The i-Ready Growth Tracker

Enter your child’s iReady Diagnostic scores to instantly see whether their growth is meeting, exceeding, or falling short of the Typical and Stretch Growth targets for their grade. Enter Fall only, Fall and Winter, or all three windows. Uses placement-level-differentiated targets — the most accurate growth benchmarks available. Updated for 2025-2026.

Use the free Score Calculator to look up your child’s percentile and placement level first, then return here to track growth.

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What Is Typical Growth on iReady?

Typical Growth is Curriculum Associates’ published benchmark for how many scale score points a student is expected to gain over a defined testing window. It is derived from the median growth of millions of iReady users at each grade level, and it tells you whether your child is keeping pace with national expectations — not whether they are above or below grade level, but whether they are moving at the expected rate.

A student can be below the 50th percentile nationally and still be meeting Typical Growth. A student can be above the 50th percentile and still be growing below the expected pace. The growth measure and the placement level measure two separate things, and both matter.

The most important thing most parents don’t know about growth targets:
Typical and Stretch Growth targets are NOT the same for every student at a given grade. They are differentiated by where a student starts — their placement level at Fall testing. A student starting Well Below Grade Level has a significantly higher Typical Growth target than a student starting On Grade Level, because they need to grow faster to close the gap. This tracker uses placement-level-differentiated targets — more accurate than using a single average per grade.

What Is Stretch Growth?

Stretch Growth is an ambitious but attainable target published by Curriculum Associates. For students below grade level, Stretch Growth represents the pace needed to reach grade-level proficiency within one to two years. For students already on or above grade level, it represents the pace needed to advance to higher proficiency levels.

Stretch Growth is significantly higher than Typical Growth — particularly for students who start the year below grade level. Only about 25-35% of students in a typical school reach their Stretch Growth target in any given year. That makes it aspirational rather than expected, but Curriculum Associates’ own research shows that students who meet Stretch Growth for two consecutive years are reliably put on a path toward grade-level proficiency.

The two-year finding: Curriculum Associates’ published research shows that students who meet Stretch Growth for two consecutive years are more likely to reach grade-level proficiency than students who meet Typical Growth twice. For a student currently Below or Well Below Grade Level, two years of Stretch Growth is the clearest path to closing the gap. One year of Stretch Growth alone accelerates more students to grade level than two consecutive years of Typical Growth.

Why Growth Targets Differ by Grade

Typical Growth targets decrease significantly as students move up through the grades. A Kindergartner meeting Typical Growth gains approximately 44-49 scale score points over the year. A Grade 8 student meeting the same benchmark gains only 9-18 points. This is not because older students are learning less — it is because the iReady scale compresses at higher levels, and because younger students are rapidly building foundational skills (phonics, number sense) that produce large RIT gains when mastered.

This also means you should never compare your child’s raw point gain to another child in a different grade. A Grade 3 student gaining 20 points has comfortably met Typical Growth. A Grade 5 student gaining 20 points has likely exceeded it. Context is everything, which is why this tracker looks up the right target for your child’s specific grade and starting placement level.

Fall-to-Winter vs Full-Year Growth

Growth is not distributed evenly across the school year. Fall-to-Winter accounts for approximately 55-60% of a student’s expected full-year growth. Winter-to-Spring accounts for the remaining 40-45%. This means if your child’s Fall-to-Winter gain was strong, they are well positioned for a good full-year result even if Spring growth is somewhat slower.

When you enter only Fall and Winter scores, this tracker estimates a Spring trajectory based on your child’s current pace. This projection is based on the seasonal growth distribution in Curriculum Associates’ published norms data and gives you a useful forward-looking target before Spring testing occurs.

Annual iReady Growth Targets by Grade and Placement Level

The tables below show full-year (Fall to Spring) Typical and Stretch Growth targets by grade and starting placement level. These are the most accurate available growth benchmarks because they account for where a student begins, not just their enrolled grade. To look up your child’s placement level from their Fall scale score, use our free Score Calculator.

Typical Growth Targets (Full Year, Fall to Spring)

Grade Well Below Below On Grade Above Well Above
Kindergarten 49 47 44 41 38
Grade 1 54 49 47 40 36
Grade 2 44 39 29 22 18
Grade 3 36 33 26 22 17
Grade 4 28 23 20 17 12
Grade 5 26 20 16 13 7
Grade 6 19 14 12 9 4
Grade 7 17 12 10 6 4
Grade 8 18 12 9 4 4

Annual (Fall to Spring) Typical Growth targets by grade and starting placement level. Source: Curriculum Associates iReady Growth Model published data. Students with lower starting placement levels have higher Typical Growth targets because they need to grow faster to close the gap.

Stretch Growth Targets (Full Year, Fall to Spring)

Grade Well Below Below On Grade Above Well Above
Kindergarten 67 65 54 50 45
Grade 1 96 67 56 44 38
Grade 2 81 53 43 27 22
Grade 3 79 63 40 39 21
Grade 4 62 50 36 27 20
Grade 5 61 47 30 25 18
Grade 6 51 38 26 25 15
Grade 7 50 37 25 23 14
Grade 8 50 36 25 22 13

Annual (Fall to Spring) Stretch Growth targets by grade and starting placement level. Source: Curriculum Associates iReady Growth Model published data. Only approximately 25-35% of students reach their Stretch Growth target in a given year, but two consecutive years of Stretch Growth reliably puts below-grade-level students on a path to proficiency.

Frequently Asked Questions About iReady Growth

What is the difference between Typical Growth and Stretch Growth? +
Typical Growth is the median growth of students at the same grade and starting placement level nationally — it tells you whether your child is keeping pace with peers. Stretch Growth is an ambitious target calculated from students who successfully closed the gap to grade-level proficiency over one to two years. Typical Growth is the minimum to aim for. Stretch Growth is what accelerates progress toward grade level for students who start below average. Only about 25-35% of students reach Stretch Growth in any given year, so missing it is not cause for alarm — but consistently meeting it over two years is the most reliable path to grade-level proficiency.
My child gained points but is still Below Grade Level. Is that a problem? +
Not necessarily. A student who starts the year significantly below grade level will not close the gap in a single window even with strong growth. What matters is whether the growth is meeting or approaching Typical Growth expectations. A student who is Below Grade Level but meeting Typical Growth is moving in the right direction — they are keeping pace with national expectations. The question to ask is: if my child maintains this pace, how many years of consistent Typical or Stretch Growth would it take to reach On Grade Level? Use this tracker’s full-year projection to get that picture clearly.
Can a student gain points and still fall behind? +
Yes. Because the expected score range rises every window, a student can gain scale score points and still see their percentile or placement level drop if their gains are smaller than the national typical. A Grade 4 student who gains 10 points Fall to Spring may feel like they improved, but if the Typical Growth target for their starting placement is 20 points, the gap between them and grade-level peers has actually widened. This is why comparing raw points to the target is essential, and why this tracker shows your gain against the appropriate benchmark rather than just displaying the raw change.
Why does my child’s growth target look different from another child in the same grade? +
Because growth targets are differentiated by starting placement level, not just by grade. A student starting Well Below Grade Level in Grade 5 has a Typical Growth target of 26 points for the full year. A student starting On Grade Level in Grade 5 has a target of 16 points. The below-grade student needs to grow faster to begin closing the gap. This is one of the most important things to understand about iReady growth data, and it is the reason this tracker uses placement-level-differentiated targets rather than a single average figure per grade.
How much growth should I expect between Fall and Winter? +
Growth is not evenly distributed across the year. Approximately 55-60% of full-year typical growth occurs between Fall and Winter, with the remaining 40-45% occurring between Winter and Spring. So for a Grade 5 student starting On Grade Level whose full-year Typical Growth is 16 points, you would expect roughly 9-10 points of growth by the Winter window. This tracker uses these seasonal proportions when calculating expected Fall-to-Winter and Winter-to-Spring benchmarks.
What should I do if my child is not meeting Typical Growth? +
One window below Typical Growth is a signal, not an emergency. Ask the teacher which specific domains within Math or Reading showed the weakest growth, and whether the current instructional support is calibrated to those specific areas. If a student misses Typical Growth for two consecutive windows, that is a clearer signal that the support plan needs to be reassessed. Ask specifically: is my child receiving any small group support targeting the domains the diagnostic flagged? And: what is the one thing I should focus on at home right now? For a full action plan, see our guide: What To Do After Getting Your Child’s iReady Score Report.
Are Math and Reading growth targets the same? +
The growth targets shown in this tracker are derived from Curriculum Associates’ published norms and apply to both Math and Reading. In practice, growth rates can vary slightly between subjects at specific grade levels — particularly in early grades where Reading foundational skills (phonics, decoding) can produce rapid gains when specifically targeted. The tables here represent the most accurate publicly available growth benchmarks for both subjects. Always interpret Math and Reading growth separately against their respective placement-level starting points.
How does growth tracking differ from looking at placement levels? +
Placement levels tell you where your child is right now relative to grade-level expectations. Growth tracking tells you how fast they are moving and whether that pace is sufficient. A student can be Below Grade Level but growing well — in which case the trend is positive even if the current label is concerning. A student can be On Grade Level but barely growing — in which case the label is fine today but may not be in six months. You need both measures together for a complete picture. Use our iReady Placement Levels guide alongside this tracker.

About the Author

Stephanie Smith, M.Ed.

Stephanie Smith is the Lead Writer and Editorial Head of the Readyscores.com Editorial Team. She is a former district-level assessment coordinator with 18 years in public education and a recognised expert in iReady Diagnostic scores and NWEA MAP Test scores interpretation.

View all articles by Stephanie Smith →

Disclaimer: Readyscores.com is an independent educational reference resource and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Curriculum Associates LLC. iReady and iReady Inform are registered trademarks of Curriculum Associates LLC. Growth target data sourced from Curriculum Associates published iReady Growth Model documentation. For official guidance about your child’s results contact your school or district directly.