Parents often hear two phrases at the same time: CAASPP and Common Core math. That can be confusing. Is the state test the same as Common Core? Should students study Common Core skills, state standards, or test-specific practice?
This guide explains what California parents need to know. The short version is simple: CAASPP is the assessment, California Common Core State Standards for Mathematics are the state learning expectations, and Common Core is a standards framework used or adapted by many states. The best preparation focuses on the actual standards and test format your child will see.
What Is CAASPP Math?
CAASPP math is the state assessment used to measure whether students are meeting grade-level math expectations in California. It is not a textbook or a curriculum. It is a test built around the knowledge and skills students are expected to learn in school.
For parents, the important question is not only "Does my child know math?" The better question is "Can my child use grade-level math skills in the kind of problem format the state test uses?"
What Is Common Core Math?
Common Core math refers to a set of math standards developed to describe what students should know and be able to do at each grade level. States decide whether to adopt, adapt, revise, or replace standards. Common Core is not a single textbook, teaching method, or practice test.
In many states, current standards still share ideas with Common Core, such as problem solving, reasoning, modeling, explaining strategies, and connecting skills across grade levels. In other states, the standards have a different name or a separate state framework.
Are CAASPP and Common Core Math the Same?
Not exactly. The most accurate answer is that CAASPP measures California Common Core State Standards for Mathematics. Common Core may overlap with some of the skills, but parents should not assume that a generic Common Core workbook fully prepares a student for CAASPP.
| Question | Parent-Friendly Answer |
|---|---|
| Is CAASPP a curriculum? | No. It is an assessment. |
| Are standards the same as lessons? | No. Standards describe goals. Lessons and practice materials teach those goals. |
| Can Common Core practice help? | Sometimes, especially for overlapping skills. But it should not replace state-aligned practice. |
| What should parents use? | Use grade-level, state-specific math practice with word problems, mixed review, and answer explanations. |
What Parents Should Do
The best preparation is practical and specific. Start with the grade-level skills your child needs, then practice those skills in state-test style questions. Use Common Core-style resources only when they clearly match the skill your child is learning.
- Ask the school which standards and test format your child is preparing for.
- Use state-aligned practice for the final weeks before testing.
- Review mistakes by skill, not just by score.
- Practice multi-step word problems, graphs, models, and explanations.
- Use full-length practice tests as checkpoints, not daily assignments.
How to Choose Practice Materials
A good practice resource should say the grade, state or assessment name, and math topic coverage clearly. It should include mixed review, realistic word problems, answer explanations, and enough practice for students to improve after mistakes.
If a resource only says "Common Core math" but does not mention California, CAASPP, or the current state standards, use it carefully. It may still help with isolated skills, but it may not match the state test style well enough for final preparation.
Practice resources
California Math Practice Resources
If your child is preparing for CAASPP math, choose practice that is state-specific and grade-specific. Generic Common Core review may help with some skills, but test readiness improves when students also practice realistic state assessment questions.
Official references
Helpful Official References
Summary
CAASPP and Common Core math are related only in the broad sense that both deal with math standards and skills. For real preparation, parents should focus on California Common Core State Standards for Mathematics, state-specific test expectations, and practice that looks like the assessment their child will take.
FAQ
Is CAASPP the same as Common Core math?
No. CAASPP is a state assessment, while Common Core refers to a set of math standards adopted or adapted by many states. For California, parents should focus on California Common Core State Standards for Mathematics and the test format students will actually see.
Does Common Core math still matter for test prep?
It can matter when the state standards are connected to Common Core-style expectations, such as reasoning, modeling, and multi-step problem solving. But parents should not stop at a generic Common Core label.
What should my child study for CAASPP math?
Your child should review the state math standards, practice grade-level skills, solve multi-step word problems, and use practice questions that look like CAASPP item styles.
Are state standards the same as curriculum?
No. Standards describe what students should know and be able to do. Curriculum, textbooks, lessons, and practice tests are tools used to teach and review those standards.
What is the best practice material for parents?
Use practice that matches the student's grade, state, assessment name, and skill needs. A strong resource should include mixed practice, word problems, answer explanations, and realistic test-style questions.
Should parents use old Common Core workbooks?
They may be useful for some skill review, but they should not be the only preparation tool. Students also need current state-aligned practice and test-format familiarity.

