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Praxis 5901: Three Subjects Bundle - Online Course

Regular price $100.00
Description

Frequently Asked Questions

The Praxis 5901 (Elementary Education: Three Subject Bundle—Mathematics, Social Studies & Science) is considered moderately challenging because it tests three separate content areas in one testing session. The exam includes:

  • 5903 Mathematics (65 minutes)
  • 5904 Social Studies (60 minutes)
  • 5905 Science (60 minutes)

All three subtests are separately timed, for a total testing time of 3 hours and 5 minutes.

The test is very manageable with structured preparation, especially if you review by subtest and practice pacing within each timed section.

Yes. Praxis 5901 is a bundled test that includes three separate subtests. You may take all three together in one testing session or register for and complete each subtest individually.

Each subtest is scored separately, and you must meet your state’s required passing score on all three to satisfy the 5901 requirement. If you pass one or two subtests but not all three, you only need to retake the subtest(s) you did not pass — you do not have to retake the entire bundle.

The Praxis 5901 includes approximately 165 total questions across three subtests:

  • 5903 Mathematics: 50 questions
  • 5904 Social Studies: 60 questions
  • 5905 Science: 55 questions

The exam consists of selected-response (multiple-choice) questions, and the Mathematics subtest also includes numeric-entry questions.

The primary difference is the number of subjects tested.

Praxis 5001 (Elementary Education: Multiple Subjects) includes four subtests:

  • Reading & Language Arts
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies 
  • Science

Praxis 5901 (Three Subject Bundle) includes only three subtests:

  • Mathematics (5903)
  • Social Studies (5904)
  • Science (5905)

The 5901 does not include a Reading & Language Arts subtest. Many states that require 5901 also require a separate Teaching Reading or Foundations of Reading exam instead.

You should confirm which test your state requires by checking directly with your state’s Department of Education, as licensure requirements vary.