Jump to content

COOP exam

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 12.195.10.99 (talk) at 14:11, 14 January 2014. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Cooperative Admissions Examination Program, or COOP exam is a standardized admissions test used by many Catholic High schools in the Northern New Jersey and Hudson valley region.

The exam is given once a year in the beginning of November on the Friday of New Jersey teacher convention break, to eighth grade students who wish to attend Catholic high schools in the dioceses of Newark and Paterson It consists of 7 separate tests designed to test students ability in Math, English, reasoning, critical thinking, etc. The test results are used by schools to compare and make decisions on applicants. Some schools may also use the exam award scholarships to high scoring students

Administration

The exam is offered once a year, usually on a Friday in early November, with the results being released during mid-January. There is a makeup-exam given usually a week after the regular test, for students who were unable to take the first one.

Fee

The exam costs 60 dollars per student. An additional fee of 15 dollars is added if the student takes the make up test

Format

The exam is divided into 7 separate Tests, each with a time limit ranging from 15 minutes to an hour. The tests deal with analogies, Math, reading comprehension, verbal and quantitative reasoning, and critical thinking.

The test is entirely multiple choice and calculators are not permitted.