5 Years of UTHS CBE Data: 8th-Grade Science Just Tripled — The Texas Acceleration Decade is Here
Most CBE trend takes you've seen point at one year of data and extrapolate. That's not what's about to follow. UT High School has now published five consecutive Annual Certification reports, covering testing years 2020–21 through 2024–25. With five real datapoints, we can tell the difference between a one-year spike, a pandemic recovery bounce, and a structural shift.
The five-year picture: it's a structural shift. Middle-school CBE volume in Texas has nearly doubled in five years. Science is leading the charge — up 180% in 8th grade alone. Pass rates have risen even as the audience has expanded. Five trends every Texas family should be planning around:
Trend 1 — Middle-school CBE has nearly doubled in five years
| Subject | 2020–21 | 2021–22 | 2022–23 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 | 5-yr Δ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6th Grade Math | 818 | 1,002 | 948 | 1,038 | 1,410 | +72% |
| 7th Grade Math | 611 | 748 | 677 | 597 | 969 | +59% |
| 8th Grade Math | 1,693 | 2,322 | 2,268 | 2,664 | 2,539 | +50% |
| 6th Grade Science | 100 | 109 | 151 | 153 | 197 | +97% |
| 7th Grade Science | 96 | 129 | 165 | 162 | 209 | +118% |
| 8th Grade Science | 162 | 258 | 324 | 370 | 454 | +180% |
Six middle-school subjects, every single one up double digits over five years. Three of the six have more than doubled. That's not a fluke; that's a movement.
Trend 2 — Science is the underreported story
The most striking five-year number isn't in math — it's 8th-grade science going from 162 testers in 2020–21 to 454 in 2024–25, an increase of 180%. 7th-grade science also nearly doubled (96 to 209, +118%).
Most of the "Texas CBE acceleration" public conversation has been about Algebra I and getting to AP Calculus. The data says families are quietly doing the same thing with science — testing out of middle-school science so high school can start with Biology, accelerate to Chemistry/Physics earlier, and load AP science later. If your child is strong in science, the science CBE pathway is now well-established.
Trend 3 — 8th-grade math peaked in 2023–24 and dipped slightly
This one needs more nuance. 8th-grade math testers went 1,693 → 2,322 → 2,268 → 2,664 → 2,539. After year-on-year growth, the 2024–25 number is 5% below the previous year. Two reasonable readings:
- Acceleration is shifting earlier in the pipeline. If 6th-grade math is up 49% in two years and 8th-grade is down 5%, families are likely passing Algebra I at younger ages — freeing 8th grade for the actual course. That's a healthier acceleration pattern.
- Self-selection is sharpening. The 8th-grade math 80%+ pass rate hit 35% in 2024–25, up from 30% the prior year. Fewer students testing, more of them passing. Families are pre-screening with practice exams before committing.
Either way: if you're planning 8th-grade math CBE for your child, the all-Texas competitive bar is now higher than ever. Aim for 88%+ on practice before committing.
Trend 4 — Pass rates are rising even as the audience expands
| Subject (80%+ pass rate) | 2020–21 | 2021–22 | 2022–23 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6th Math | 44% | 45% | 44% | 45% | 46% |
| 7th Math | 13% | 13% | 17% | 15% | 23% |
| 8th Math | 29% | 29% | 32% | 30% | 35% |
| 8th Science | 31% | 44% | 36% | 49% | 50% |
7th-grade math jumped 10 points (13% → 23%) over the same period 7th-grade math volume grew 59%. That's the opposite of an over-hyped trend — over-hyping pulls in less-prepared students and depresses pass rates. The signal here: families joining the CBE movement are doing the prep work.
Trend 5 — A leadership change at UTHS — and the policy framework holds
Across the five reports, the UTHS Superintendent changed: Beth Cooper, Ed.D. signed the earlier reports; Michael Caudill, Ed.D. signs the current one. What didn't change: the certification framework, the TAC §74.24 statute citations, the 70% / 80% thresholds, or the subject list. Texas CBE policy survives administrator changes.
For families: your 4-year acceleration plan does not depend on which superintendent sits at UTHS this year. The framework is statutorily stable.
What this means for your child's plan
- 4th- and 5th-grade parents: The 5-year data says 6th-grade math CBE is the new entry point. 1,410 students did it last year. If your child is on grade level or stronger, take a free practice exam to gauge fit.
- 6th- and 7th-grade parents: Math CBE pass rates rose 10 points in five years. The opportunity got bigger AND the bar got higher. Use a decision framework (we have a 5-question one) before committing.
- 7th and 8th science: A near-tripling in 5 years means science CBE is no longer a fringe pathway. If your child is strong in science, this is the most under-utilized CBE opportunity in Texas right now.
- 8th-grade math families: Bar is now 35% pass rate at 80% threshold, up from 29%. Aim for practice scores 88%+ before signing up — the all-Texas competitive context is tighter than it was even two years ago.
- K–3 families: CBE at this age is dwindling for a reason. Build the foundation; the real CBE acceleration conversation starts around grade 5–6.
How we can help
Texas CBE™ offers free practice and full-length mocks for the 7 most-requested CBE subjects (Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II, Pre-Calculus, Biology, Chemistry, US History) — the subjects with the highest volume in the UTHS reports. 20 free sample questions per subject, no signup; full-length timed mocks are $19.99 per subject (6 months), currently 33% off the $29.99 list.
Sources
- UTHS Credit by Exam Certification 2021–22 (data: 2020–21 testing year)
- UTHS Credit by Exam Certification 2022–23 (data: 2021–22 testing year)
- UTHS Credit by Exam Certification 2023–24 (data: 2022–23 testing year, signed by Beth Cooper, Ed.D.)
- UTHS Credit by Exam Certification 2024–25 (data: 2023–24 testing year)
- UTHS Credit by Exam Certification 2025–26 (data: 2024–25 testing year, signed by Michael Caudill, Ed.D.)
- Primary URL: highschool.utexas.edu/credit_by_exam
This article is for general information only and is not legal or educational advice. UTHS CBE policies, certified subjects, fees, and the TEA-set passing thresholds (TEC §28.023 for acceleration / 19 TAC §74.24 for prior-instruction recovery) are subject to change — always confirm current specifics with your counselor, UTHS, or TEA. Texas CBE™ is an independent practice platform; not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operated by The University of Texas at Austin, UT High School, the Texas Education Agency, Texas Tech University ISD, the College Board, or any school district, and does not administer any exam or grant academic credit.