GORT-5 Explainer

A Parent Field Guide

GORT-5: What parents actually need to know.

Gray Oral Reading Test, Fifth Edition

The GORT-5 measures how your child reads aloud. It is the test most often given when a school or clinician wants to know how reading sounds in real time, with all the cracks showing. This guide walks through the four scores, why a slow reader is not always a struggling reader, and what to push on when the report comes back.

The Quick Facts

The 30-second version.

Before you dive into the details, here is the short version of what the GORT-5 is and how it is given.

Ages
6:0 to 23:11
Normed from 1st grade through young adulthood. Most often used K through 12.
Time
15 to 45 minutes
Stops once the child hits a ceiling. Younger or struggling readers finish faster.
Format
Read aloud, one on one
Child reads short passages out loud while the examiner times and tracks errors. Then answers comprehension questions.
Measures
Oral reading
Rate, accuracy, fluency, and comprehension. Not silent reading. Not decoding in isolation.
Key Number
Scaled scores
Subtests use scaled scores (mean 10, SD 3). The Oral Reading Index uses standard scores like the WIAT.
The Key Point

Slow does not mean struggling. Read the four scores together.

The GORT-5 trap is reading the Rate score first and assuming a low number means a reading problem. It does not. Slow can mean broken decoding. Slow can also mean a careful reader who is making meaning. The four scores tell the difference.

The Rate Trap

Why Rate alone misleads.

Rate is just words per minute. A child who reads slowly because they are decoding word by word gets the same low Rate as a child who is reading slowly because they are thinking about the passage. These are completely different profiles, but they look identical if you only look at Rate. Treat Rate as an input to the bigger picture, never as the headline.

What to focus on

The relationship between the four scores.

Look at Rate, Accuracy, and Comprehension together. A slow but accurate reader with strong comprehension is reading well, just deliberately. A fast reader with low accuracy and low comprehension is racing through text without understanding. Same Fluency score on paper, completely different kid. The pattern across the subtests is what matters.

A high Rate score is not automatically good. Sometimes the slow reader is the one actually understanding the text.

What It Measures

The four subtests, plus the headline composite.

The GORT-5 produces four subtest scaled scores (mean 10, SD 3) and one composite. Here is what each one is actually capturing during the test.

Subtest 01
Rate
How fast the words come out
What it measuresThe time it takes to read each passage aloud. Faster reading earns a higher score.
How it is givenExaminer times each passage with a stopwatch from start to finish.
Most affected by Decoding ability, automaticity, and processing speed. Also affected, in the unhelpful direction, by careful comprehension. A thoughtful reader can score lower on Rate even when their reading is fine.
Subtest 02
Accuracy
How many errors
What it measuresNumber of deviations from the printed text per passage. Substitutions, omissions, mispronunciations, and additions all count as errors.
How it is givenExaminer marks each error on a scoring sheet while the child reads.
Most affected by Decoding skills, phonological awareness, and dyslexia. The single best GORT-5 indicator of decoding-based reading difficulty. Pair it with the CTOPP-2 for a fuller picture.
Subtest 03
Fluency
Rate plus Accuracy combined
What it measuresA combined score that takes both speed and accuracy into account. Not a separate task, just a different calculation.
How it is givenDerived from Rate and Accuracy raw scores. The child does not do an additional task.
Most affected by Whichever of Rate or Accuracy is weaker. A child can tank Fluency because they are slow, because they are inaccurate, or because they are both. The Fluency score alone does not tell you which.
Subtest 04
Comprehension
Did they understand it
What it measuresFive multiple-choice questions per passage, asked orally after the child reads. Open book is allowed: the passage stays in front of the child.
How it is givenExaminer reads each question and four answer choices. Child responds verbally.
Most affected by Vocabulary, background knowledge, working memory, and the ability to find information in text. Multiple choice means some questions can be guessed correctly, so a moderate score does not always mean strong comprehension.
Composite 05
Oral Reading Index
The headline number
What it measuresA combined standard score (mean 100, SD 15) made from Fluency and Comprehension. This is the GORT-5 number most often quoted in reports and at IEP meetings.
How it is givenCalculated from the subtest scores. Same scale as the WIAT-4 and WISC-V.
Most affected by Whatever is dragging Fluency or Comprehension down. Treat the ORI as a starting point, not a verdict. Always look at the four subtest scores underneath it.
Accuracy is the dyslexia-sensitive subtest. Always look at it.

If decoding is the question on the table, the Accuracy score does the most work. A low Accuracy score paired with the GORT-5 is the on-the-record evidence that something is wrong with how words are coming off the page. Pair it with phonological testing (CTOPP-2) for the diagnostic picture.

How Scores Are Interpreted

The scaled-score table.

Subtests use scaled scores: mean 10, standard deviation 3. The Oral Reading Index uses standard scores like the WIAT (mean 100, SD 15). Here is what each subtest range actually means.

Scaled ScorePercentileWhat It Actually Means
17 to 1999th and aboveVery superior. Top 1 to 2 percent of kids this age.
15 to 1695th to 98thSuperior. Clearly strong.
13 to 1484th to 91stAbove average. Stronger than typical.
8 to 1225th to 75thAverage. The middle half of kids this age.
6 to 79th to 16thBelow average. Below typical but not yet clinical.
4 to 52nd to 5thPoor. Low enough to matter for SLD eligibility.
1 to 31st and belowVery poor. Well outside the typical range.
One thing to remember A 3-point gap between subtests is one standard deviation, and almost always meaningful. If Comprehension is 3 or more points different from Accuracy, the report should explain it.
The Four Patterns

What your kid’s profile shape is telling you.

Like every reading test, the GORT-5 is most useful when you read the four subtests as a shape, not as four separate numbers. These are the patterns that show up most often.

Pattern 01

The Slow, Effortful Decoder

Rate, Accuracy, and Fluency are all low. Comprehension is intact or only mildly affected. The child is decoding word by word and getting it mostly right, just slowly and with effort. They understand what they read because they are working hard for it.

Why it mattersThis is the classic dyslexia signature on the GORT-5. Decoding is the bottleneck, comprehension is preserved. Push for evidence-based reading intervention focused on phonics and fluency, not comprehension strategies.
Pattern 02

The Fast Inaccurate Reader

Rate is high, but Accuracy is low and Comprehension drops. The child is racing through text, skipping or substituting words, not stopping to check meaning. Reading sounds fluent on the surface, but the substance is missing.

Why it mattersOften missed because the child sounds confident. Frequently linked to ADHD, anxiety, or learned habits (“just finish”). Push for slowed-down repeated reading and explicit work on monitoring meaning while reading.
Pattern 03

The Word Caller

Rate, Accuracy, and Fluency look fine. Comprehension is the lone low score. The child can read every word on the page, but cannot tell you what it was about.

Why it mattersEasy to overlook because the child sounds like a strong reader. Often a sign of weak vocabulary, language comprehension issues, or reduced background knowledge. Listening comprehension testing (and the WIAT-4 Oral Language composite) usually clarifies the picture.
Pattern 04

The Globally Low Profile

Every subtest is below average with no clear peak or valley. The child is not strong in any one area and is struggling across the board.

Why it mattersAlmost always interpreted alongside cognitive testing. If the WISC-V is similarly low, instruction needs to match cognitive level. If cognitive is stronger than reading, the gap itself is the diagnostic finding for SLD eligibility.
The Guardrails

What this test is, and isn’t, used for.

The GORT-5 is a strong oral reading measure, but it is often asked to do things it was not designed to do. Knowing the line helps you push back when needed.

What it is for

Legitimate uses.

  • Documenting oral reading skill across rate, accuracy, fluency, and comprehension
  • Identifying decoding-specific weaknesses (low Accuracy with intact Comprehension)
  • Tracking progress over time when re-administered using alternate forms
  • Pairing with cognitive and phonological testing to evaluate SLD
  • Clarifying whether reading struggles are decoding, comprehension, or both
What it is not for

Misuses to push back on.

  • Diagnosing dyslexia on its own (need phonological measures like the CTOPP-2)
  • Measuring silent reading comprehension (this is oral reading only)
  • Universal screening (it is individually administered, not a screener)
  • Concluding “no reading problem” because the ORI is in the average range
  • Using Rate alone as evidence of fluency or its absence
  • Replacing curriculum-based progress monitoring
An average ORI does not rule out a reading disability.

If Comprehension is high enough to pull the ORI into the average range while Accuracy is two standard deviations below average, the average ORI is hiding a real decoding problem. Always insist on the subtest breakdown. Never accept the composite as the final word.

Questions to Ask

Walk in prepared. Walk out with answers.

These questions move the conversation from “here are the scores” to “here is what the scores mean for my kid.” Ask them.

Before Testing

Set expectations early.

  1. Which form (A or B) will you administer, and is this a re-test from a previous evaluation?
  2. Will you record a sample of the oral reading so I can hear what you heard?
  3. How will you handle stops and starts if my child gets nervous reading aloud?
  4. Will the report include all four subtest scaled scores plus the Oral Reading Index?
  5. How will you pair this with phonological and cognitive testing for the full reading picture?
After Results

Make them walk you through it.

  1. What is the relationship between Rate, Accuracy, and Comprehension, and what does it mean for instruction?
  2. Are there 3-point or larger gaps between subtests, and what do they suggest?
  3. What kinds of errors did my child make on Accuracy? Substitutions, omissions, or self-corrections?
  4. Did my child slow down to comprehend, or because they could not decode? How did you decide?
  5. How does this profile compare to the WISC-V cognitive scores and any phonological testing?
Red Flags in the Report

Stop and ask if you see any of these.

The GORT-5 is straightforward when interpreted well and easy to misread when not. These are the warning signs worth slowing down for.

Flag 01

Only the Oral Reading Index is reported.

The composite hides everything that matters. If the report shows just the ORI without the four subtest scaled scores underneath, you are missing the actual data. Ask for the breakdown.

Flag 02

A low Rate score described as a fluency problem.

Slow reading is not automatically a fluency problem. If the child is slow because they are decoding word by word, the issue is decoding, not fluency. The intervention has to match the cause, not the surface symptom.

Flag 03

No discussion of error type on Accuracy.

The kinds of errors matter. Sound-based substitutions (“hat” for “had”) look different from whole-word guesses (“happy” for “house”). If the report does not break down what the errors looked like, you are missing diagnostic information.

Flag 04

An “average” ORI used to rule out reading disability.

The ORI averages Fluency and Comprehension. If one of those subtests is well below average and the other is above average, the composite can land in the middle. Always check the underlying subtests before accepting “no concern” as the conclusion.

Flag 05

Comprehension scored without addressing decoding load.

If a child decoded the passage with effort, mental energy gets pulled away from understanding. A low Comprehension score in that case is not a comprehension problem, it is the cost of overloaded working memory. The report should make that connection.

Flag 06

Conclusions drawn without comparing to phonological or cognitive testing.

The GORT-5 alone cannot identify a specific learning disability in reading. If the report makes eligibility-level claims without referencing the CTOPP-2, WIAT-4, or WISC-V findings, it is not finishing the job.

Key Takeaway

Four subtests, one shape. The pattern is the answer, not the composite.

The GORT-5 tells you how reading sounds in real time. A slow reader and a fast reader can both be struggling, just with different problems. A high Comprehension score and a low Accuracy score in the same child means decoding is the bottleneck, not understanding. The Oral Reading Index is the headline number, but the four subtest scores underneath are what tell you what is actually happening, and what the next step needs to be.