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Praxis 7001 Online Course

Regular price $150.00
Description

Frequently Asked Questions

The Praxis Elementary Education: Multiple Subjects (7001) can feel challenging because it includes four separately timed subtests: Teaching Reading (7002), Mathematics (7003), Social Studies (7004), and Science (7005). Each section assesses both your content knowledge and your ability to apply that knowledge appropriately.

Many candidates find the test difficult not because the content is unfamiliar, but because of how questions are written and how distractors are designed. With structured review, focused practice, and strong elimination strategies, the Praxis 7001 is absolutely manageable. Learning to recognize patterns in question wording and common trap answers makes a significant difference. 

The Praxis 7001 includes approximately:

  • Teaching Reading (7002): 80 questions
  • Mathematics (7003): 40 questions
  • Social Studies (7004): 55 questions
  • Science (7005): 50 questions

That’s about 225 total questions across all four subtests. The test consists of selected-response and numeric entry questions.

Most states require a scaled score between 150 and 160, but requirements differ depending on your state’s certification standards. Praxis scores are reported as scaled scores. A scaled score adjusts for slight differences in difficulty between test versions, ensuring fairness across administrations. Because of this scaling process, the number of questions you answer correctly does not directly equal your final reported score.

Always check your state’s Department of Education website to confirm the exact passing score you need. You can access information on passing scores by state on the ETS website.

The Praxis 5001 and Praxis 7001 are very similar in structure. Both assess elementary education content across four subject areas: Reading, Mathematics, Social Studies, and Science.

The key difference is that the 7001 includes Teaching Reading (7002), which places greater emphasis on the science of reading and instructional practices. Otherwise, the overall structure—four subtests, similar timing, and comparable content areas—remains largely the same.

Just like the 5001, success on the 7001 comes down to strong content review, consistent practice, and learning how to Think Like a Test Maker® to eliminate weak answer choices efficiently.