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Year 4 to Year 5: Building Towards the Selective Test — A Parent's Roadmap

Discover when to start selective test preparation and how to build skills from Year 4 through Year 6 with a sustainable, proven roadmap for NSW parents.

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Quick Answer: Braintree Coaching Australia recommends gentle enrichment in Year 4, structured selective test practice in Year 5, and targeted preparation in Year 6. The NSW selective test is a 155-minute computer-based assessment covering Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing.

When Should You Start Selective Test Preparation?

The most effective selective test preparation begins gently in Year 4, becomes structured in Year 5, and turns test-specific in Year 6. The NSW Selective High School Placement Test is sat in Year 6 for entry into Year 7 — a computer-based assessment spanning 155 minutes across four equally weighted components: Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing.

Braintree Coaching Australia has supported thousands of NSW families through this journey, and one pattern holds: starting too early risks burnout, while starting too late leaves no room to build depth. With approximately 4,248 places across 47 selective and partially selective schools — and more than 17,000 applicants each year — the runway you give your child matters as much as the final sprint.

We started gently in Year 4 with extra reading and puzzles, ramped things up in Year 5 with structured practice, and by Year 6 our daughter felt confident rather than overwhelmed. That gradual build made all the difference.

Priya M., Parent, Parramatta

Your Selective Prep Roadmap

Navigate the complete parent's guide to building towards the selective test


What Is the 3-Year Selective Test Roadmap?

The 3-year selective test roadmap is a gradual, layered plan that builds skills progressively from Year 4 to Year 6 rather than cramming intensive coaching into the final year. Think of it as constructing a house: Year 4 lays the foundation, Year 5 builds the walls and structure, and Year 6 puts on the roof and fine-tunes everything.

Each phase has a distinct purpose, and rushing the earlier stages undermines the later ones. The detailed NSW selective test preparation strategies we use with families follow exactly this sequence.

The Selective Test Preparation Journey

  1. Year 4 — Foundation Phase

    12 months

    • Build a love of reading across genres
    • Develop mathematical confidence beyond the syllabus
    • Cultivate curiosity, critical thinking, and general knowledge
    • Optional: prepare for the OC test (sat during Year 4)

    Daily independent reading (20–30 minutes) · Maths puzzles and problem-solving challenges · Discussion-based learning at home · Introduce logic and pattern-recognition games

  2. Year 5 — Skill-Building Phase

    12 months

    • Introduce structured reasoning and test-format practice
    • Develop typing proficiency for the computer-based test
    • Strengthen written expression and argument construction
    • Build time awareness and exam stamina

    Weekly practice in reading comprehension, maths reasoning, and thinking skills · Regular writing exercises (persuasive, narrative, analytical) · Typing practice targeting 30–35 WPM · Begin timed short exercises

  3. Year 6 — Test-Specific Phase

    6–9 months

    • Master the selective test format across all four components
    • Refine time management under exam conditions
    • Build confidence through mock tests and feedback
    • Address individual weaknesses with targeted revision

    Full-length practice papers under timed conditions · Regular mock tests with performance analysis · Targeted revision of weak areas · Stress management and exam-day strategies

This timeline is a guide, not a rigid schedule. Every child is different — some need a longer runway, others pick up skills quickly. The critical insight is that Year 5 is the pivot point: the year where casual enrichment transitions into intentional, structured selective test preparation before the Year 6 selective test arrives.


What Should Your Child Focus On in Year 4?

Year 4 is for building intellectual habits and confidence, not test papers and exam techniques. The goal is simple: help your child become a curious, capable learner who reads widely, thinks carefully, and enjoys problem-solving.

Reading: The Single Most Important Habit

Reading is the single highest-leverage habit in Year 4. Consistent, wide-ranging reading underpins three of the four selective test components — Reading, Writing, and Thinking Skills.

Encourage your child to read for at least 20 to 30 minutes daily, across a variety of genres: fiction, non-fiction, historical texts, science writing, biographies, and age-appropriate news. The aim is not to prepare for specific questions but to build vocabulary, comprehension stamina, and an intuitive feel for how language works.

Year 4 Reading Goals

  • Read independently for 20–30 minutes daily

  • Explore at least 3 different genres each term

  • Discuss books together — ask 'Why do you think the character did that?'

  • Visit the library regularly and let your child choose freely

  • Introduce age-appropriate non-fiction (science, history, current events)

  • Read slightly above comfort level to stretch vocabulary naturally

Mathematical Confidence Over Speed

In Year 4, the focus should be on understanding mathematical concepts deeply rather than drilling speed. Children who develop genuine number sense — who can reason about why a method works, not just how to apply it — perform significantly better in the Mathematical Reasoning component.

Encourage exploration through puzzles, pattern-based games, and real-world maths challenges. Board games like chess, Sudoku, and logic puzzles develop the spatial and sequential reasoning that underpins the Thinking Skills section.

Curiosity-Driven Learning

Year 4 children are naturally curious. Lean into that. Explore science experiments at home, discuss current events at the dinner table, visit museums, and encourage questions. This broad general knowledge feeds into comprehension passages, writing topics, and abstract reasoning — all tested in the selective exam.


Why Is Year 5 the Pivotal Year?

Year 5 is the pivotal year because it is where preparation shifts from general enrichment to intentional skill development. This does not mean hours of drilling every night — it means introducing your child to the types of thinking the selective test demands, in a structured and progressive way.

Understanding the Test Format

By Year 5, your child should become familiar with the four components of the selective test:

NSW Selective Test at a Glance

Computer-based assessment sat in Year 6 for Year 7 entry

45 min
Reading17 questions across 3 multi-part passages
40 min
Mathematical Reasoning35 questions testing problem-solving and number sense
40 min
Thinking Skills40 questions on abstract and logical reasoning
30 min
Writing1 extended writing task assessed on quality

Familiarising your child with the format in Year 5 — not to master it, but to understand what is expected — removes the fear of the unknown and lets Year 6 preparation focus on performance rather than orientation. A full breakdown is in our NSW selective test format guide.

Developing Reasoning Skills

The thinking skills test component often catches families off guard. Unlike Reading or Maths, this part assesses abstract, non-verbal reasoning — pattern recognition, spatial manipulation, and logical sequencing. These skills respond well to consistent, deliberate practice over time, which is why starting in Year 5 is so valuable.

Introduce your child to practice questions involving:

  • Pattern completion — identifying the next element in a visual sequence
  • Spatial reasoning — mentally rotating, reflecting, or folding shapes
  • Logical deduction — drawing conclusions from given information
  • Analogical reasoning — understanding relationships between concepts

Typing Proficiency: A Non-Negotiable

The selective test is entirely computer-based, and the Writing component requires students to type an extended response within 30 minutes. Students are expected to type fluently at approximately 30 to 35 words per minute — a skill that takes months of regular practice to develop.

Year 5 is the ideal time to begin building typing proficiency. Free online typing programmes make this engaging, and even 10 to 15 minutes of practice three times a week yields significant improvement over a school year.

Introducing Structured Practice

In Year 5, aim for a consistent weekly practice routine rather than intensive daily sessions. A sustainable schedule might look like this:

Sample Year 5 Weekly Practice Schedule

  1. 1.Monday — Reading Comprehension (30 minutes)

    Work through one age-appropriate reading passage with questions. Discuss tricky vocabulary and inference questions together.

  2. 2.Wednesday — Mathematical Reasoning (30 minutes)

    Tackle problem-solving questions that go beyond school-level maths. Focus on reasoning and showing working, not just getting the answer.

  3. 3.Friday — Thinking Skills (20–30 minutes)

    Complete a set of abstract reasoning or pattern recognition questions. Review errors together to build understanding of question types.

  4. 4.Weekend — Writing Practice (30 minutes)

    Write one extended response — persuasive, narrative, or analytical. Focus on structure, vocabulary, and developing an argument rather than speed.

  5. 5.Ongoing — Typing (10–15 minutes, 3 times per week)

    Use a free typing programme to build speed and accuracy. Track progress and celebrate milestones.

The total weekly commitment at this stage is approximately two and a half to three hours — manageable alongside school, sport, and social activities. A useful starting point for at-home work is the Year 5 sample paper, which introduces question types without overwhelming your child. Consistency matters far more than volume.


What Does Year 6 Test Preparation Involve?

Year 6 test preparation is about sharpening performance under exam conditions: refining time management, building stamina, and addressing specific weaknesses. By now your child should have a solid skill foundation and a working familiarity with the test format, so this year is where consistent practice translates directly into confidence on exam day.

Selective Test Practice Papers and Timed Conditions

Regular practice under timed conditions is essential in Year 6. Working through selective test practice papers — full-length papers or at least full-length sections — helps your child develop the pacing instincts needed to complete each component within its time limit.

After each session, review the results together. Look for patterns: are they running out of time on Reading? Struggling with a particular type of thinking skills test question? Making careless errors in Maths? Targeted revision of specific weaknesses is far more effective than blanket repetition. Our NSW selective practice tests and resources provide graded papers for exactly this stage.

Mock Tests: Building Exam Confidence

Mock tests simulate the real exam experience and are one of the most valuable tools in the Year 6 toolkit. They help your child:

  • Experience the pressure of a timed, formal setting
  • Practise the computer-based format in realistic conditions
  • Identify areas of strength and weakness with measurable data
  • Build the mental stamina required for 155 minutes of focused thinking

Braintree Coaching Australia offers free mock tests that replicate the selective test environment, giving students a realistic benchmark of their readiness.

Time Management Strategies

Within each component, effective time management separates strong students from top performers. Teach your child to:

  • Read the question carefully before answering — misreading costs more time than careful reading
  • Move on from difficult questions and return to them later rather than getting stuck
  • Allocate time per question — for example, roughly one minute per question in Mathematical Reasoning
  • Leave five minutes at the end to review flagged answers

The NSW selective test day guidelines set out exactly how the exam day unfolds, which helps your child rehearse these strategies in context.

Writing Under Pressure

The Writing component requires a well-structured, articulate response in just 30 minutes. By Year 6, your child should be comfortable with:

  • Planning an essay in two to three minutes
  • Writing a clear introduction, developed body paragraphs, and a conclusion
  • Using varied vocabulary and sentence structures
  • Proofreading quickly for errors

Regular timed writing practice — even one piece per week — builds the fluency needed to perform well under pressure.

Year 6 Test Preparation Checklist

  • Complete at least one full-length timed practice paper per fortnight

  • Sit 3–4 mock tests before the real exam

  • Review every practice paper to identify patterns in errors

  • Practise typing at 30–35 WPM with accuracy

  • Develop a consistent essay planning method for the Writing component

  • Build a question-skipping strategy for difficult items

  • Establish a calm exam-day routine (sleep, breakfast, arrival time)

  • Maintain balance — keep sport, hobbies, and downtime in the schedule


How Does the OC Test Connect to the Selective Test?

The opportunity class test connects directly to the selective test because they share three of four components — Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, and Thinking Skills. The OC test is sat in Year 4 for entry into Year 5, so children who have been through OC test preparation carry a significant head start into selective preparation.

The skills developed during OC preparation — close reading, logical reasoning, mathematical problem-solving, and working under timed conditions — are directly transferable to the selective test. If your child sat the OC test in Year 4, much of the selective journey is already underway.

How the two assessments compare across key dimensions

OC Test vs Selective Test
FeatureOption 1Option 2Verdict
Year TakenYear 4Year 62-year gap allows skill development
FormatComputer-basedComputer-basedSame digital testing environment
Reading14 questions, 40 min17 questions, 45 minSelective adds complexity and length
Mathematical Reasoning35 questions, 40 min35 questions, 40 minSame structure, harder content
Thinking Skills30 questions, 30 min40 questions, 40 minSelective increases volume
WritingNot tested1 task, 30 minNew component requiring preparation
Typing RequiredMinimal30–35 WPMMust develop typing fluency

For students who sat the OC test, the selective journey is often smoother because the test-taking mindset is already established. They understand timed conditions, multiple-choice strategy, and the value of practice. The main additions for the selective test are the Writing component and the increased difficulty across all sections.

If your child did not sit the opportunity class test, do not worry. The same skills can be developed through a well-structured Year 5 programme — the OC pathway is an advantage, not a prerequisite. To see how the two pathways align over time, our sibling guide on the 6-month OC preparation timeline maps out a comparable build for the Year 4 sitting.


What Foundational Skills Does Every Child Need?

Regardless of when you begin formal preparation, certain foundational skills underpin success across every selective test component. These are not test-specific tricks — they are the building blocks of academic capability that serve your child well beyond any single exam.

Reading Widely and Deeply

Students who read widely develop larger vocabularies, stronger comprehension, and a natural sense of how arguments and narratives are constructed. This feeds directly into Reading, Writing, and Thinking Skills.

Encourage reading across fiction, non-fiction, newspapers, science magazines, and opinion pieces. Breadth matters as much as volume — a child who reads only fantasy fiction will struggle with the informational and analytical texts that frequently appear in the selective test.

Solving Puzzles and Problems

Mathematical reasoning and thinking skills are fundamentally about problem-solving. Children who regularly engage with puzzles — logic grids, Sudoku, chess, tangrams, coding challenges — develop the flexible, analytical thinking these components demand.

The key is to normalise being stuck. Children who learn to persist through a difficult problem, try different approaches, and tolerate uncertainty are far better prepared for the challenging questions that differentiate top performers.

Writing Regularly

Writing is a skill that develops through practice. Children who write regularly — journals, stories, letters, persuasive arguments, book reviews — build fluency, vocabulary, and the ability to organise their thoughts clearly under time pressure.

In the selective test, the Writing component is assessed on the quality of ideas, structure, vocabulary, and language conventions. These qualities cannot be crammed in a few weeks — they emerge from months and years of regular writing.

The children who do well in the selective test are not the ones who have done the most practice papers. They are the ones who read voraciously, think critically, and write with confidence — skills built over years, not weeks.

Braintree Coaching Australia, Academic Team

How Do You Know If You're Starting Too Early or Too Late?

Both extremes carry risks. Starting too late leaves no time to build depth; starting too early risks burnout and resentment. Finding the right balance is the difference between a confident child and an exhausted one.

Signs You May Be Starting Too Late

If your child is entering Year 6 without any prior exposure to competitive test formats, watch for these warning signs:

  • Unfamiliarity with question types — spending time understanding what questions ask rather than solving them
  • Slow typing speed — unable to type fluently enough to complete the Writing task
  • Limited reading stamina — struggling to concentrate through longer, more complex passages
  • Time-pressure panic — freezing or rushing when faced with a timed task
  • Gaps in mathematical reasoning — difficulty with multi-step or unfamiliar problems

If you recognise these signs, intensive, well-structured preparation can still make a meaningful difference, but the window is narrower. Focus on the highest-impact areas: typing proficiency, test-format familiarity, and timed practice.

Signs You May Be Starting Too Early

Beginning intensive, test-focused preparation in Year 3 or early Year 4 can create problems:

  • Burnout and resentment — your child associates learning with pressure and obligation
  • Diminishing returns — skills plateau when pushed beyond age-appropriate levels
  • Loss of intrinsic motivation — learning becomes about scores rather than curiosity
  • Social and emotional cost — missing out on play, sport, and social development
  • Repetitive practice fatigue — running out of fresh material before the actual test year

The sweet spot for most families is gentle enrichment in Year 4, structured practice in Year 5, and targeted test preparation in Year 6. This phased approach builds skills progressively without sacrificing your child's love of learning.


How Do You Keep Preparation Sustainable?

You keep preparation sustainable by protecting your child's wellbeing throughout a two-to-three-year journey and maintaining a healthy relationship with learning. The families who navigate it most successfully treat it as a marathon, not a sprint.

Set Realistic Expectations

Not every child will secure a place at a fully selective school, and that is perfectly fine. The skills developed during preparation — critical thinking, disciplined study habits, strong literacy and numeracy — benefit your child regardless of the outcome. Frame the journey as one of growth, not just results.

Maintain Balance

Your child needs time for sport, creative activities, friendships, and unstructured play. These are not luxuries to be sacrificed for extra practice papers — they are essential for cognitive development, emotional resilience, and sustained motivation. Protect at least two to three afternoons per week for non-academic activities, even in the final months.

Celebrate Progress, Not Just Scores

Focus on what your child is improving rather than fixating on marks. Did they manage their time better this week? Did they attempt a question type they previously avoided? Did their writing show more sophisticated vocabulary? These incremental improvements matter and deserve recognition.

Know When to Step Back

If your child is consistently anxious, tearful, or resistant to practice, it is a signal to reassess. A short break — even a week or two — can reset motivation. No selective test result is worth compromising your child's mental health or your relationship with them.

Sustainability Checklist for Parents

  • Keep at least 2–3 afternoons per week free from academic work

  • Maintain regular sport, music, or creative activities throughout preparation

  • Avoid comparing your child's progress with other families

  • Schedule regular breaks — a week off each school holiday is healthy

  • Talk about the journey positively — emphasise growth, not pressure

  • Seek professional support if your child shows signs of anxiety or distress

  • Remember: the selective test is one pathway, not the only pathway

Build a Support Network

Connect with other families on the same journey. Sharing experiences, resources, and encouragement makes the process less isolating for parents and children alike. A structured programme such as Braintree Coaching Australia's selective school preparation pathway provides expert guidance, regular benchmarks, and a community working towards the same goal. For Year 5 and Year 6 students ready for a full programme, the Selective Ultimate Pack covers all four components with personalised feedback. Common questions are answered in our NSW selective school FAQ.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Year 4 too early to start preparing for the selective test?

Year 4 is not too early to build foundational skills — reading widely, developing mathematical confidence, and nurturing curiosity. However, Year 4 is too early for intensive, test-focused preparation such as drilling practice papers. Think of Year 4 as the enrichment phase: broad, enjoyable, and low-pressure. Structured selective test practice is best introduced in Year 5.

What if we missed the opportunity class test? Is it too late?

Not at all. The opportunity class test is a separate Year 4 pathway that provides a useful head start, but it is not a prerequisite for selective school success. Many students who did not sit or pass the OC test go on to secure selective offers. A well-structured programme starting in Year 5 provides ample time to develop the necessary skills. The NSW selective test preparation strategies work equally well for non-OC families.

How many hours per week should my child practise in Year 5?

In Year 5, approximately two and a half to three hours per week of structured practice is sufficient — spread across three to four sessions. This allows time for each test component without overwhelming your child. Consistency is more important than volume. As Year 6 approaches, you may gradually increase to four or five hours per week.

How important is typing for the NSW selective test?

Typing is critically important. The entire selective test is computer-based, and the Writing component requires students to type an extended response in 30 minutes. Students who type slowly cannot express their ideas fully within the time limit. Aim for 30 to 35 words per minute with reasonable accuracy by the start of Year 6, and start practising in Year 5 — it takes months of regular practice to develop.

What does the NSW selective test actually assess?

The NSW Selective High School Placement Test, sat in Year 6, is a 155-minute computer-based assessment with four equally weighted components: Reading (45 minutes, 17 questions across three passages), Mathematical Reasoning (40 minutes, 35 questions), a thinking skills test (40 minutes, 40 abstract reasoning questions), and Writing (30 minutes, one extended response). It rewards deep comprehension, flexible problem-solving, logical reasoning, and clear written communication rather than rote memorisation.

Is one year of selective test preparation enough?

One year of focused selective exam preparation — typically Year 6 — can be sufficient for students who already have strong foundational skills in reading, maths, and reasoning. However, two years (starting in Year 5) is ideal for most students because it allows time to develop thinking skills test abilities, build typing proficiency, and introduce each component gradually without pressure. Students who start with just one year often find themselves cramming multiple skill areas simultaneously.

Can opportunity class test preparation help with the selective test?

Yes. The opportunity class test and the selective test share three of four components — Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, and Thinking Skills. Students who have completed OC test preparation have already developed core reasoning skills, test-taking stamina, and familiarity with the computer-based format. The main addition for the selective test is the Writing component, which requires typing fluency and the ability to construct a well-argued extended response in 30 minutes.

How can I tell if my child is on track for the selective test?

By the end of Year 5, your child should be comfortable with age-appropriate reasoning questions, able to type at approximately 25 to 30 words per minute, reading independently for 30 minutes or more, and producing structured written responses of 300 to 400 words. By mid-Year 6, they should be completing full selective test practice papers within time limits, scoring consistently on mock tests, and improving in their weakest component. Regular free mock tests provide the most reliable benchmarks.


Start Building Towards Selective Success

Braintree Coaching Australia's structured courses guide students from Year 4 foundations through to Year 6 test mastery — with expert teaching, realistic practice, and a supportive learning community.


Further Reading and Resources

Continue exploring our guides to support your child's selective school journey


Related Guides


Last updated: 6 February 2026

Braintree Coaching Australia helps NSW families build skills from Year 4 to Year 6 with a sustainable, structured roadmap. Start with a free mock test or explore the full preparation pathway.

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Questions parents ask about this article

Is Year 4 too early to start preparing for the selective test?
Year 4 is not too early for foundational skills — reading widely, building mathematical confidence, and nurturing curiosity. It is too early for intensive, test-focused drilling. Treat Year 4 as a gentle enrichment phase. Structured selective test practice is best introduced in Year 5.
What if we missed the opportunity class test? Is it too late?
No. The opportunity class test is a separate Year 4 pathway, not a prerequisite for the selective test. Many students who did not sit or pass the OC test secure selective offers. A structured programme starting in Year 5 leaves ample time to build the required skills.
How many hours per week should my child practise in Year 5?
Approximately two and a half to three hours per week of structured practice is sufficient in Year 5, spread across three to four sessions. Consistency matters more than volume. As the Year 6 selective test approaches, you may gradually increase to four or five hours per week.
How important is typing for the NSW selective test?
Typing is critically important. The selective test is entirely computer-based, and the Writing component requires an extended response in 30 minutes. Aim for 30 to 35 words per minute with reasonable accuracy by the start of Year 6, and begin practising in Year 5.
What does the NSW selective test actually assess?
The NSW Selective High School Placement Test is a 155-minute computer-based assessment with four equally weighted components: Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing. It rewards deep comprehension, flexible problem-solving, logical reasoning, and clear written expression rather than rote memorisation.
Is one year of selective test preparation enough?
One focused year — typically Year 6 — can be sufficient for students with strong foundational skills. Two years (starting in Year 5) is ideal for most children because it allows time to develop thinking skills, build typing fluency, and introduce each component gradually without pressure.
Can opportunity class test preparation help with the selective test?
Yes. The opportunity class test and the selective test share three of four components — Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, and Thinking Skills. Students with OC preparation already have reasoning skills, test stamina, and computer-based familiarity. The main addition is the Writing component, which needs typing fluency.
How can I tell if my child is on track for the selective test?
By the end of Year 5, look for comfort with age-appropriate reasoning questions, typing near 25 to 30 words per minute, 30 minutes of independent reading, and structured 300 to 400 word written responses. By mid-Year 6, full timed practice papers and consistent mock-test scores are good benchmarks.

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