
Subscription Costs
The subscription charges below reflect the cost per school district, court, or youth service provider.
Both the High School and Middle School versions of the WARNS require an annual subscription cost of $275 that includes 50 student assessments. A $1 charge will apply for each student assessed in a given year beyond the first 50 up to a total of 500 students. The $1 charge will only apply up to 500 students assessed with no further charges beyond 500 students.
There is a discount if a subscription for BOTH assessments is needed. These costs include the use of the WARNS instrument and the Dynamic Reporting Platform (PSSO) as well as one 30-minute training for the Primary User.
Subscription Type | Annual Rate | Per Student Charge |
High School WARNS - 1-year subscription: | $275 | • 1 to 50 students: $0, • 51 up to 500 students: $1 per student, • 500+ students: $0 |
Middle School WARNS – 1-year subscription: | $275 | • 1 to 50 students: $0, • 51 up to 500 students: $1 per student, • 500+ students: $0 |
Both High School and Middle School WARNS – 1-year subscription: | $500 | • 1 to 100 students: $0, • 101 up to 500 students: $1 per student, • 500+ students: $0 |
The subscription cost is dependent on one contact at the subscribing organization (the Primary User) being able to manage and train users at individual schools. For this subscription cost, you may have multiple users of the WARNS at multiple schools. In order to keep costs low, WSU can only support one individual within the organization as the main contact who supports the administration of the assessment within their jurisdiction. Please contact us if you have any questions about this. We also offer a cooperative agreement where a limited number of small population districts may subscribe as a group to save costs – please contact us for details.
One final note, while we are happy to meet with you prior to subscription to answer question you may have, additional meetings beyond our 30-minute training may incur additional charges.
Washington state school district map.