I can tell you from having administered the ITBS twice that some tests--like social studies and science--are much more content-specific, so I would expect scores to be lower there. For example, if a child studied earth science instead of biology as the test expected, the child's science score would probably be lower (depending upon what the child learned through osmosis and the Science Channel, of course...), even though there's a lot of material the child *does* know that wasn't covered on the test. It's just a matter of never having seen the material.
Homeschoolers usually have somewhat lower scores on these content-y subjects than they do on the math and language arts sections (among others). Unless the child has been at least somewhat "taught to the test," it's kind of inevitable.
Obviously if there are too many of these gaps, it can become a problem. But all kids have gaps. All of them. Even the ones who didn't skip any grades and who sat in class every day. That's why spiral curricula are the norm. It's not a big deal unless it's extreme.
I would argue that unless the school's curriculm follows the ITBS exactly--and I can't imgine that it would if they don't use the ITBS for their normal testing--then lower (but not low) science and hisory scores are probably irrelevant.
I'm tired and not explaining this well, but what I'm saying is that if the material in the ITBS isn't what the school covers, then those test scores are less relevant to whether she can succeed at a higher grade. Does that make sense?
I think you gave her the right test based upon what you say you're using it for. If you wanted to distinguish ceilings, you'd have to get out of that 90+ range and have her get some low scores in some things. Then you'd need a test designed for older kids.
But it sounds like what you really want/expect to see is a cluster of high scores at the top (still) so as to persuade the school that she needs a more appropriate school fit. That means that one year up was probably your best choice.
My advice: don't let them keep her from advancing (assuming you think that's what she needs and she wants to do it) because of her history score. I'd recommend offering to catch her up at home if necessary, but I wouldn't let that slow her down if she's ready to move up.
P.S. to Dottie: Interesting about the Explore! I wonder if they're trying to combat this very issue.
