NJ TestNav: New Jersey State Testing Guide 2026
Complete guide to NJ TestNav for New Jersey state assessments. Learn how the platform works, navigation tips, and how to prepare students for testing.

NJ TestNav: New Jersey State Testing on the TestNav Platform
If you're a student, teacher, or test coordinator in New Jersey, you've almost certainly encountered TestNav — the online testing platform Pearson built for standardized assessments including the NJSLA (New Jersey Student Learning Assessments) and other state-required tests. It's not glamorous software, but understanding how it works before test day prevents a lot of avoidable confusion.
This guide covers what NJ students and educators need to know about TestNav: how it's used for New Jersey's state testing programs, what the interface looks like, common technical requirements, accessibility features, and how students can practice with the platform before the real thing.
What Is TestNav and How Does New Jersey Use It?
TestNav is the online testing platform developed by Pearson and used across multiple states and assessment programs. In New Jersey, it's the primary delivery system for the NJSLA — the assessments that replaced PARCC for grades 3-11 in English Language Arts and Mathematics.
The platform runs on most modern computers, tablets, and Chromebooks that meet minimum hardware and software requirements set by the New Jersey Department of Education. Schools typically use a secure browser install or a lockdown browser that prevents students from accessing other applications during testing.
Here's why this matters: TestNav isn't a standard website. It behaves differently than Chrome or Safari in ways that can trip up students who've never used it before. The navigation, the way you flag questions, the zoom controls — all of it works differently enough that sitting down cold on test day is a real disadvantage. Practice sessions help.
How TestNav Works for NJ Assessments
The NJ TestNav interface has a few key elements students encounter during every session:
Navigation Controls
TestNav displays questions one at a time or in sections depending on the assessment. Students navigate using forward and back arrows, not a browser back button. The browser back button does nothing — and clicking it in a panic is a common mistake during timed sections.
Question Flagging
Students can flag any question for review. Flagged questions appear marked in the review screen so you can return before submitting. This is crucial for timed tests — skip questions you're uncertain about, finish the rest, then return with remaining time.
Answer Tools
Depending on the subject and question type, TestNav provides answer tools including: drag-and-drop response areas, equation editors for math questions, text highlighting, answer eliminators (cross-out wrong choices), and line guides for reading passages. These tools are available specifically because they're needed — students who know they exist and practice using them perform better than students who discover them mid-test.
Accessibility Features
TestNav includes built-in accessibility tools: text-to-speech, zoom controls, color contrast settings, and background color options. Students with approved accommodations may have additional tools enabled by their test coordinator. If a student has a documented accommodation, the test coordinator must activate it before the test session — it won't appear automatically.
Technical Requirements for NJ TestNav
TestNav has specific system requirements that schools must meet. As a student, you probably don't control your school's tech setup — but knowing the requirements helps you understand what to expect and flag issues before test day.
Minimum requirements for the current version of TestNav include:
- Operating System: Windows 10/11, macOS 11+, ChromeOS 96+, or iPadOS 14.5+
- RAM: 4GB minimum (8GB recommended for smooth performance)
- Screen resolution: 1024x768 or higher
- Internet connection: Stable connection required; the platform can buffer some content but not fully function offline
- Secure browser: Pearson's secure browser app or a lockdown browser configured by the district
Schools test systems before assessment windows using TestNav's built-in System Check tool. If you're a test coordinator, run system checks at least two weeks before your testing window — not the day before. Technical issues that surface during actual testing sessions are significantly harder to resolve.
Common TestNav Issues and Fixes in NJ Schools
A few problems come up repeatedly during New Jersey state testing sessions:
Student Can't Log In
Usually a credentials issue — the student's testing ticket has incorrect information, or the session hasn't been opened in PearsonAccessNext (PAN). Test coordinators open sessions and resume them from PAN, not TestNav itself. If a student is stuck at the login screen, the fix is almost always in PAN, not on the student's device.
Test Freezes Mid-Session
TestNav saves progress automatically. If a student's test freezes or the device crashes, the coordinator can resume the test from PAN — the student's answers are preserved up to the last auto-save point. Students should know this so they don't panic if there's a technical interruption.
Accessibility Tools Missing
If a student with an accommodation can't find their tools, the accommodation wasn't activated in PAN before the session. Coordinators need to return to PAN, activate the accommodation on the student's test, then have the student re-launch TestNav.
How Students Can Practice with TestNav Before NJ Testing
Pearson and the NJDOE provide practice test resources specifically for New Jersey students. These include:
- TestNav Tutorial: Available at the TestNav website before login. Walks through every tool type without requiring a student account.
- NJSLA Practice Tests: The NJDOE posts sample items and released test questions annually. These are the closest thing to real NJSLA content available for student practice.
- School district practice sessions: Most NJ districts run at least one Technology-Enhanced Practice (TEP) session before the main assessment window. Students should treat these seriously — it's the only chance to use the real platform in a real session before the test counts.
Beyond the official tools, familiarity with question types that appear in TestNav — drag-and-drop, multiple-select, equation-editor math questions — helps reduce test-day friction significantly. Our TestNav practice tests cover the main question types and platform interactions you'll encounter.

Getting Ready for NJ TestNav
The bottom line: TestNav isn't a test itself — it's the delivery system for the tests that matter. Students who've seen the interface before test day, who know where the flag button is, who've used the answer eliminator tool at least once, perform better than students who encounter it all for the first time under timed conditions.
Use your school's practice sessions. Run through the TestNav Tutorial. Explore the tool types in our TestNav Testing Interface practice test and TestNav Accessibility Tools practice test. Familiarity with the platform removes friction on test day — and removing friction lets you focus on what actually matters: the questions themselves.
For test coordinators: start your technical setup early, run PAN checks before opening sessions, and make sure every accommodation is configured before students sit down. The platform works reliably when it's set up correctly — most issues trace back to configuration gaps, not platform failures.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.