NAEP Jobs: Working with Westat on the National Assessment 2026 June

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NAEP Jobs: Working with Westat on the National Assessment 2026 June

What Are NAEP Jobs?

The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), often called the Nation's Report Card, is a federally mandated assessment program administered by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) under the U.S. Department of Education. NAEP doesn't have a full-time, school-based staff — instead, it relies on a network of trained field personnel who travel to participating schools during the testing cycle to administer the assessments.

Westat is the primary contractor responsible for field operations. Westat recruits, trains, and manages the field staff who actually visit schools to administer NAEP assessments. NAEP jobs listed under Westat or "naep.westat.com" are the primary pathway for field employment in the NAEP program. These are not federal government positions — they are contractor positions through Westat, though the work is funded by the federal NAEP program.

The main field role is the Assessment Administrator (AA). Assessment Administrators travel to assigned schools, coordinate with school staff, administer the NAEP assessment to a sample of students in the target grade, and complete required documentation. The role requires strong organizational skills, ability to work in school settings, and comfort with detailed procedural requirements — the standardized administration of NAEP means specific protocols must be followed consistently across all test sites.

NAEP jobs are typically part-time and seasonal. The main NAEP data collection happens in winter and spring of each year, with field staff working intensively during that window. Some positions may offer year-round part-time hours for training, preparation, and related activities, but the core field work follows the assessment schedule. This makes NAEP field work a good fit for educators, retirees, or others who need flexible part-time employment rather than full-time work.

The NAEP subject knowledge page covers what subjects are assessed and at which grade levels — this background is useful for anyone considering field work, as Assessment Administrators should be familiar with the general scope of what students are being asked to do during NAEP sessions.

The NAEP cycle operates on a biennial schedule for most subjects and grade levels, with Reading and Mathematics assessed at grades 4 and 8 every two years, and other subjects (Science, History, Civics, Arts, Writing) assessed less frequently. The Long-Term Trend NAEP, which has tracked student performance since the early 1970s, adds a historical comparison dimension to the program. Field staff work on the specific assessments that are scheduled for each cycle — not all subjects are administered every year.

Because NAEP is a sample-based assessment, only a subset of students in each school is selected to participate — students don't "prepare" for NAEP the way they would for a high-stakes state test. This means field staff are working in schools where students and teachers view the assessment as lower-stakes. Some students are enthusiastic participants; others are indifferent. Field staff need to be effective at engaging students in the assessment environment without the external motivational pressure that high-stakes testing provides.

NAEP field staff operate under confidentiality requirements regarding the specific questions and content of each assessment. Field personnel sign agreements about protecting assessment security, which specifically includes not discussing specific test items with teachers or school staff beyond what's needed for administration. This security requirement is important for maintaining the validity of NAEP as a consistent longitudinal measure — any exposure of specific items to the student population in advance would compromise the comparability of naep scores across years and states.

How to Apply for NAEP Jobs with Westat

NAEP Study Tips

NAEP Jobs vs. Other Education Field Work

Remote NAEP Jobs and Westat Career Paths

While most NAEP field positions require in-person school visits, some NAEP-related positions at Westat are partially or fully remote. Quality control reviewers, data analysts, project coordinators, and training developers who work on the NAEP contract at Westat's home offices may work remotely or in hybrid arrangements. These positions are less commonly advertised as "NAEP jobs" but represent the full-time career track within the NAEP program's contractor infrastructure.

Westat is a large research organization headquartered in Rockville, Maryland, with additional offices and remote staff across the country. The NAEP program is one of many federal research contracts Westat manages — along with health surveys, education studies, and other federally funded research. Employees who start in NAEP field positions and want to move into full-time research careers sometimes transition into other Westat programs after demonstrating strong performance in field roles.

The NAEP exam tips page provides context on what the NAEP assessments look like from a student perspective, which helps field staff understand what they're administering. Assessment Administrators who understand the assessment design — why the questions are structured the way they are, what NAEP measures and doesn't measure — tend to be more effective at explaining the purpose of the assessment to school staff and managing student questions during sessions.

NAEP Field Work: Benefits and Drawbacks

NAEP Jobs Questions and Answers

About the Author

Dr. Lisa PatelEdD, MA Education, Certified Test Prep Specialist

Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert

Columbia University Teachers College

Dr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.

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