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Does NAPLAN Affect Selective School Entry? What Parents Need to Know

Does NAPLAN affect selective school entry in NSW? Learn the key differences between NAPLAN and selective tests and what actually matters.

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Quick Answer: No. NAPLAN does not determine NSW selective school entry. Placement is decided solely by the NSW Selective High School Placement Test, administered by the NSW Department of Education.

Does NAPLAN Affect Selective School Entry? The Short Answer Is No

"I kept pushing my daughter to get top NAPLAN scores because I thought it would help her get into a selective school. It wasn't until we spoke to another parent that I realised they're completely separate tests." — Priya, Parent of Year 5 student, Parramatta

If you have been wondering whether NAPLAN results affect selective school entry, you are not alone. It is one of the most common questions parents ask when their child begins primary school. The confusion is understandable — both assessments test academic skills, both happen during primary school years, and both carry significant weight in parent conversations.

Here is the definitive answer: NAPLAN does not directly determine selective school entry. They are completely separate assessment systems with different purposes, different formats, and different administering bodies.

However, the relationship between the two is more nuanced than a simple "no." The underlying skills tested do overlap, and strong NAPLAN performance can be a useful indicator of academic readiness. This guide clears up the confusion once and for all.

In this guide, you'll discover:

  • The definitive answer on whether NAPLAN affects selective school placement
  • Why so many parents mistakenly believe the two are connected
  • How NAPLAN and selective school tests actually compare side by side
  • When NAPLAN results might indirectly matter for your child
  • What genuinely determines selective school entry in NSW
  • What to focus on instead of worrying about NAPLAN scores

What's Covered in This Guide

Everything you need to understand about NAPLAN and selective school entry


The Definitive Answer: NAPLAN Does Not Determine Selective Entry

Let us be absolutely clear: NAPLAN results are not used in selective school placement decisions in NSW. The two systems are entirely separate.

NAPLAN (the National Assessment Program — Literacy and Numeracy) is a national assessment conducted across all Australian states and territories. It tests students in Years 3, 5, 7, and 9 on Reading, Writing, Conventions of Language (spelling, grammar, and punctuation), and Numeracy. It is administered by ACARA and has been delivered online since 2023, with the test window held in March each year. NAPLAN is designed to measure how students are progressing against national literacy and numeracy benchmarks — it is not a competitive entry examination.

The NSW Selective High School Placement Test, by contrast, is a voluntary, competitive aptitude test administered by the NSW Department of Education and developed by Cambridge Assessment. Students sit this test in Year 6 for entry into Year 7 at one of the 47 selective high schools across NSW. The test includes Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing — totalling 155 minutes.

Similarly, the Opportunity Class (OC) Placement Test for Year 5 entry and the HAST (Higher Ability Selection Test) used by many partially selective schools are also entirely separate from NAPLAN.

Why So Many Parents Think NAPLAN and Selective Tests Are Connected

The confusion between NAPLAN and selective school entry is widespread, and there are several understandable reasons for it.

Both test similar skill areas. NAPLAN assesses reading, writing, and numeracy. Selective tests assess reading, mathematical reasoning, thinking skills, and writing. On the surface, these look almost identical — and the foundational skills genuinely do overlap.

Both happen during primary school. NAPLAN in Year 3 and Year 5 coincides with the period when families are preparing for OC (Year 4 test) and selective (Year 6 test) entry. The timing creates an association in parents' minds.

Word of mouth and playground conversations. When parents discuss test results, NAPLAN and selective tests often come up in the same conversation. Without clear information, it is easy to assume one feeds into the other.

Coaching centres sometimes blur the line. Some tutoring providers market "NAPLAN and selective preparation" as a single package, which reinforces the impression that the two are directly linked.

NAPLAN tells you how your child is tracking against national standards. Selective tests tell you how your child performs in a competitive, timed aptitude assessment against other high-ability applicants. They serve fundamentally different purposes.

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NAPLAN vs Selective School Tests: A Side-by-Side Comparison

Understanding the structural differences between these assessments makes it clear why one cannot substitute for the other.

Key differences every parent should understand

NAPLAN vs NSW Selective Test
FeatureOption 1Option 2Verdict
PurposeMeasure national literacy and numeracy progressCompetitive placement into selective schoolsCompletely different aims
Who administers itACARA (national body)NSW Department of Education / Cambridge AssessmentDifferent organisations
Mandatory?Yes — all students in Years 3, 5, 7, 9No — voluntary applicationNAPLAN is universal; selective is opt-in
Test componentsReading, Writing, Conventions of Language, NumeracyReading, Maths Reasoning, Thinking Skills, WritingSelective includes Thinking Skills
FormatAdaptive online test over a 9-day windowFixed-difficulty, single sitting, 155 minutes totalVery different test design
Result scaleExceeding / Strong / Developing / Needs additional supportCompetitive ranking against all applicantsStandards-based vs competitive ranking
Used for school entry?NoYes — sole basis for placementOnly the selective test matters for entry

The most critical difference is the inclusion of Thinking Skills in the selective test. This component — which tests abstract reasoning, pattern recognition, and logical thinking — has no equivalent in NAPLAN. It accounts for 25% of the selective test and is often the area that distinguishes competitive applicants.

When NAPLAN Might Indirectly Matter

While NAPLAN results play no role in selective school placement, they are not entirely irrelevant to your child's selective school journey. Here is where the indirect connection exists.

As a readiness indicator. If your child consistently achieves "Exceeding" or "Strong" results in NAPLAN Reading and Numeracy, it suggests they have a solid foundation in the core skills that selective tests also assess. NAPLAN can serve as a useful early signal — particularly the Year 3 results if you are considering OC entry, or Year 5 results if you are thinking about selective high school.

For identifying skill gaps. NAPLAN results can highlight areas where your child may need additional support. If your child scores "Developing" in Reading, for example, this is a skill area that will also be tested in the selective exam. Addressing it early benefits both assessments.

For building academic confidence. Students who perform well in NAPLAN often approach other academic challenges with greater confidence. This psychological readiness matters when preparing for the higher-stakes selective test.

What NAPLAN cannot tell you. NAPLAN does not assess Thinking Skills (abstract reasoning), which is a major component of both the OC and selective tests. A strong NAPLAN result says nothing about your child's ability to handle pattern recognition, spatial reasoning, or logical deduction tasks. This is why specific selective test preparation is essential regardless of how well your child performs on NAPLAN.

What Actually Determines Selective School Entry in NSW

If NAPLAN is not the answer, what does determine whether your child gains entry to a selective school? Here is what matters.

The Selective School Entry Process

  1. 1.Application

    Parents submit an online application through the NSW Department of Education during the designated application period, typically in the year before the intended entry year.

  2. 2.The Placement Test

    Students sit the NSW Selective High School Placement Test in Year 6. The test covers Reading (45 min), Mathematical Reasoning (40 min), Thinking Skills (40 min), and Writing (30 min) — 155 minutes total.

  3. 3.Competitive Ranking

    Students are ranked based on their overall test performance. Each component contributes 25% to the total score.

  4. 4.School Preferences

    Families list preferred selective schools. Placement considers both the student's ranking and their school preferences.

  5. 5.Offers

    Offers are made based on available places at each school. Approximately 4,248 places are available across 47 selective schools for over 17,000 applicants each year.

For Opportunity Class entry, the process is similar but the test is sat in Year 4 for Year 5 placement. The OC test covers Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, and Thinking Skills — each weighted equally at 33.3%. Approximately 2,500 places are available across 89 OC schools for over 15,000 applicants.

For schools using the HAST (Higher Ability Selection Test), the assessment is administered by ACER and is paper-based. It includes Reading, Mathematics, Abstract Reasoning, and Written Expression. Results are provided to the applying schools, which make their own placement decisions.

What Matters for Selective Entry

  • Performance on the specific selective placement test (not NAPLAN)

  • Strong reading comprehension and vocabulary skills

  • Mathematical reasoning ability (not just computation)

  • Thinking skills — abstract reasoning, pattern recognition, and logic

  • Writing ability under timed conditions

  • Keyboard proficiency — typing speed of 30-35 WPM is recommended for the selective test

  • Familiarity with computer-based, timed test conditions

What to Focus on Instead

Now that you know NAPLAN does not affect selective school entry, here is where to direct your energy.

Start with the right preparation. Selective test preparation should target the specific skills and format of the relevant placement test. This means practising Reading comprehension at a competitive level, Mathematical Reasoning (which goes beyond school curriculum), Thinking Skills (which are rarely taught in regular classrooms), and timed Writing. Our NSW selective test format guide breaks down each section, time limit, and question type, and our NSW selective test preparation strategies explain how to build a study plan that fits your child.

Build Thinking Skills early. Since Thinking Skills is the component with no NAPLAN equivalent, it deserves particular attention. Abstract reasoning, pattern recognition, and spatial awareness can be developed through targeted practice, puzzle-based activities, and structured preparation programmes.

Practise under test conditions. The selective test is a high-pressure, timed assessment. Regular practice under realistic conditions — including computer-based mock tests — helps students build the stamina and time management skills they need. Explore free mock tests to give your child a head start, and our structured Selective Ultimate Pack course provides full-length papers, marked Writing, and dedicated Thinking Skills training. For early skill-building, the Year 5 sample paper is a useful way to gauge where your child sits.

Do not neglect NAPLAN entirely. While NAPLAN does not determine selective entry, it remains an important benchmark of your child's academic progress. Strong performance in both systems reflects a well-rounded student. The key is not to conflate the two or assume that NAPLAN preparation is sufficient for selective test readiness.


Frequently Asked Questions

Does NAPLAN affect selective school entry?

No. NAPLAN results are not used in any selective school placement decision in NSW. The NSW Selective High School Placement Test, the OC Placement Test, and the HAST are all entirely separate assessments. Your child's NAPLAN scores — whether high or low — have no bearing on whether they receive an offer from a selective school.

Can strong NAPLAN results predict selective test success?

Strong NAPLAN results can indicate that your child has solid foundational skills in reading and numeracy, which are also tested in selective exams. However, NAPLAN does not assess Thinking Skills (abstract reasoning), which is a major component of selective tests. A child who excels at NAPLAN may still need significant preparation for the selective test format and difficulty level.

Should I prepare my child for NAPLAN if we are aiming for a selective school?

NAPLAN preparation and selective test preparation are different things. NAPLAN is a standards-based assessment aligned to the national curriculum, while selective tests are competitive aptitude assessments. If your goal is selective school entry, focus your preparation efforts on the specific selective test. Your child's regular classroom learning should be sufficient for NAPLAN.

Do selective schools look at NAPLAN results after enrolment?

NAPLAN results may be used by schools — including selective schools — as part of their internal monitoring of student progress after enrolment. However, this is about tracking academic development, not about determining initial entry. All selective schools use their respective placement tests for admission decisions.

What is the biggest difference between NAPLAN and the selective test?

The most significant difference is the Thinking Skills component in the selective test, which assesses abstract reasoning, pattern recognition, and logical thinking. NAPLAN has no equivalent section. Additionally, the selective test is a competitive ranking assessment, while NAPLAN measures progress against fixed national standards. The difficulty level, time pressure, and test design are fundamentally different.

When should selective test preparation start?

For OC entry (test in Year 4), many families begin structured preparation in Year 3. For selective high school entry (test in Year 6), preparation typically begins in Year 4 or Year 5. Starting early allows time to build Thinking Skills and develop familiarity with the test format. Read our complete guide to NSW selective school entry for detailed timelines.


Prepare for the Selective Test — Not Just NAPLAN

Helpful Resources

Everything you need to plan your child's selective school journey

Related Guides

Last updated: January 2026

NAPLAN does not decide selective entry — the placement test does. Try a free mock test under timed conditions, or explore a structured selective preparation course.

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Questions parents ask about this article

Does NAPLAN affect selective school entry?
No. NAPLAN results are not used in any selective school placement decision in NSW. The NSW Selective High School Placement Test, the OC Placement Test, and the HAST are entirely separate assessments. Your child's NAPLAN scores, whether high or low, have no bearing on whether they receive a selective school offer.
Can strong NAPLAN results predict selective test success?
Strong NAPLAN results can indicate that your child has solid foundational skills in reading and numeracy, which are also tested in selective exams. However, NAPLAN does not assess Thinking Skills, a major component of selective tests. A child who excels at NAPLAN may still need significant preparation for the selective test format and difficulty level.
Should I prepare my child for NAPLAN if we are aiming for a selective school?
NAPLAN preparation and selective test preparation are different things. NAPLAN is a standards-based assessment aligned to the national curriculum, while selective tests are competitive aptitude assessments. If your goal is selective school entry, focus your preparation on the specific selective test. Your child's regular classroom learning should be sufficient for NAPLAN.
Do selective schools look at NAPLAN results after enrolment?
NAPLAN results may be used by schools, including selective schools, as part of their internal monitoring of student progress after enrolment. However, this is about tracking academic development, not determining initial entry. All selective schools use their respective placement tests for admission decisions.
What is the biggest difference between NAPLAN and the selective test?
The most significant difference is the Thinking Skills component in the selective test, which assesses abstract reasoning, pattern recognition, and logical thinking. NAPLAN has no equivalent section. The selective test is also a competitive ranking assessment, while NAPLAN measures progress against fixed national standards.
When should selective test preparation start?
For OC entry, with the test in Year 4, many families begin structured preparation in Year 3. For selective high school entry, with the test in Year 6, preparation typically begins in Year 4 or Year 5. Starting early allows time to build Thinking Skills and develop familiarity with the test format.

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