Few parts of the private school admissions process create more anxiety for Houston families than the ISEE score report itself. It arrives full of numbers, percentiles, and stanines, with no clear label telling you whether the result is good, mediocre, or cause for concern. Understanding how the test is actually scored, and how Houston’s independent schools actually use those scores, takes most of the mystery, and a good deal of the anxiety, out of the process.
The ISEE reports scores across four sections: Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, and Mathematics Achievement. Each section is scored in three different ways. There is a scaled score, a raw conversion that allows for comparison across different test forms. There is a percentile rank, which tells you how your child performed relative to other students of the same grade who have taken the test over the past three years. And there is a stanine, a nine-point scale that groups percentile ranks into broader bands, which is the number most schools actually reference when discussing an applicant’s testing profile. There is also an essay, which is unscored by the ISEE itself but is sent directly to schools as a writing sample for them to evaluate on their own terms.
The stanine is worth understanding in a bit more depth, because it is the number schools tend to focus on. Stanines run from 1 to 9, with 9 representing the strongest performance and 1 the weakest, and each stanine corresponds to a range of percentiles rather than a single precise cutoff. Generally speaking, stanines of 7 through 9 are considered strong, stanines of 4 through 6 fall in an average range, and stanines of 1 through 3 are considered below average relative to the norm group. But it is important to resist the urge to treat these bands as pass or fail thresholds. A stanine is a relative measure, not an absolute judgment of a child’s intelligence or potential, and it should always be read alongside everything else in an application rather than in isolation.
This matters because Houston’s independent schools, schools like The Kinkaid School, St. John’s School, Episcopal High School, Awty International School, Strake Jesuit, St. Agnes Academy, and others, genuinely do evaluate applicants holistically rather than screening by test score alone. Admissions committees are weighing current grades and transcript trends, teacher recommendations, the student interview, extracurricular involvement and character, and fit with the school’s culture, alongside ISEE performance. A strong ISEE score can meaningfully strengthen an application, and a weaker one is not automatically disqualifying, particularly when the rest of a student’s profile is compelling. This is genuinely good news for families, because it means a single difficult testing day, or a student who tests less well than they perform in the classroom, does not have to define the outcome of an application.
When we sit down with a family’s score report, we are looking at more than the headline stanines. We are looking at the pattern across sections, since a student who is strong in verbal reasoning and reading comprehension but weaker in quantitative reasoning tells a different story, and calls for a different plan, than a student with the reverse profile. We are also looking at the percentile trends if a student has tested more than once, since improvement over time can be a meaningful signal in itself, both for planning purposes and, in some cases, for context schools may find useful. And we are looking at how the student’s profile compares specifically to the applicant pools of the schools on the family’s list, rather than to a generic national average, because that comparison is the one that actually matters for admissions decisions.
This is an area where having an experienced guide matters. We help Houston families translate a score report into something actionable: what the numbers actually mean in the context of a specific school list, whether a retest makes sense and, if so, what should change before the next attempt, and how to think about the ISEE score as one input into a broader admissions strategy rather than the entire strategy itself. Because our work extends beyond test prep into school placement guidance, we are able to have a fuller conversation with families about how a given score fits into the complete picture for each school on their list, rather than reacting to the number in a vacuum.
If you have a score report in hand and are not sure what it means for your family’s school list, we would be glad to walk through it with you. Text or WhatsApp us at 713-725-8199, and let’s put the numbers into context together.
Text us at 713-725-8199, and we’ll be in touch to schedule a quick call. We’d love to learn more about your student and share what comes next.
All of our services can be blended to match your student’s needs, goals, and learning style. Most families begin working with us in elementary or middle school and stay through college and beyond.
We offer both Zoom and in-person options.
Let us help you design the perfect educational support plan, built just for your family.
📍 Based in Houston. Serving families nationwide and abroad.
📱 Text 713-725-8199 to get started.
7521 Westview Dr, Houston, TX 77055
