BSHS HAST practice resources: official samples and study materials
A practical guide to HAST practice materials for Brisbane State High School selective entry — official ACER sample materials, recommended workbooks, and how many full mock papers to sit across a twelve-month preparation plan.
By Braintree Editorial, Braintree Coaching Australia editorial team
Reviewed by Braintree Academic Panel on
Last updated
Quick Answer
Start with the official ACER HAST sample paper to set a baseline, then build a weekly routine combining sectional drills, vocabulary practice and timed writing. Across a nine- to twelve-month plan most students sit ten to fourteen full-length mock papers, with thorough mistake review after every paper.
- Official baseline paperACER HAST sample
- Mocks across the plan10–14 papers
- Sectional drillsDaily, 20–30 minutes
- Writing practice1 timed task per week
Read the full Brisbane State High School Selective Entry Preparation (HAST) guide.
HAST practice resources for Brisbane State High School fall into three groups: official sample materials from ACER and from the school itself, structured workbooks from Australian publishers, and the weekly materials used inside our BSHS selective entry preparation programme. This page sets out what to use at each stage of the year, where to find verified free resources, and how many full mock papers a child typically completes before the real sitting.
Where can we get the official HAST sample materials?
The most reliable starting point for HAST preparation is the free sample paper published by the test administrator and the application information published by the school. These materials match the format, timing and difficulty of the real sitting — third-party samples vary widely in quality and are best used as supplementary practice once the official baseline has been established.
- Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) publishes the official HAST test information, sample questions and section descriptions. ACER builds and marks the paper, so the sample is the closest indicator a family can get of real question style and difficulty.
- Brisbane State High School publishes the selective entry application process, fees, key dates and the school's own guidance to applicant families. Read this alongside the ACER materials before any paid resource is purchased.
- Queensland Department of Education publishes the broader policy framework for selective entry at Queensland state high schools, including the application calendar and documentation requirements that sit behind the BSHS process.
Sit the ACER sample paper under timed conditions in week one of the preparation year as a diagnostic. Mark it carefully, identify the two weakest sections, and use the result to shape the first three months of practice. A diagnostic that is not reviewed is wasted practice — set aside ninety minutes to mark and discuss the paper before the next sitting.
What kinds of practice materials does a HAST candidate actually need?
A complete HAST preparation kit covers four kinds of material: section-specific drills, full-length mock papers, vocabulary and writing rubrics, and a mistake-tracking log. Each addresses a different gap, and none replaces the others.
| Material | Purpose | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Section-specific drills (reading, mathematical reasoning, abstract reasoning) | Building accuracy on individual question types. | Daily, 20–30 minutes per session. |
| Full-length timed mock papers | Practising stamina, pacing and section-to-section transitions. | Weekly in months 4–8; twice weekly in months 9–11. |
| Vocabulary lists with context sentences | Lifting reading comprehension and written expression scores. | 20 new words per week throughout the plan. |
| Writing prompts with rubrics | Improving structure, vocabulary and timing under a 30-minute write. | One timed write per week. |
| Mistake log | Identifying recurring errors and stopping them recurring. | After every sectional or mock paper. |
The single most important entry on this list is the mistake log. A student who reviews every wrong answer — and writes the type of mistake (not just the question) into a running list — improves significantly faster than one who simply sits more papers without review.
How many practice papers should a child sit?
A typical BSHS HAST preparation plan includes ten to fourteen full-length mock papers across nine to twelve months. The number is less important than the pacing: cluster mocks too early and the child plateaus; leave them too late and there is no time to act on the patterns.
- Months 1–3 (diagnostic and foundation). One full-length paper in week one as a baseline (the official ACER sample), and one more at the end of month three. The goal in this phase is accuracy under untimed conditions — not yet pace.
- Months 4–8 (skill building). One full-length paper every two to three weeks (about three to four papers in this phase), plus two timed sectional papers each week. Review every paper carefully before sitting the next one.
- Months 9–11 (mastery). One full-length paper per week, sat in real conditions — timed, scored, no calculator, no notes. Most students sit five to eight papers in this phase.
- Final four weeks (taper). One or two full-length papers in the first fortnight, then taper to vocabulary, mental-math and abstract-reasoning review only. No new mock papers in the final week.
A child who sits twelve mocks with thorough review reliably outperforms one who sits twenty-five without it. The review is where the marks are made.
What should we look for in a paid HAST question bank?
Paid third-party question banks vary considerably in quality. Before committing budget to one, check it against four criteria:
- Difficulty matched to the real test. Compare a sample question to the official ACER sample paper. If the third-party questions are noticeably easier or harder — particularly in mathematical reasoning and abstract reasoning — the bank will not predict real performance.
- Solutions that explain the reasoning, not just the answer. A bank that returns "B" without explanation does not help a student improve. Look for solutions that name the inference in a reading passage, the step in a maths problem or the transformation rule in an abstract reasoning item.
- Coverage across every section the child will sit. Year 6 candidates need abstract reasoning coverage; Year 5 HAST-P candidates do not. Question banks that skip written expression leave a quarter of the paper unprepared.
- Access through to the sitting. Some banks expire after thirty or sixty days. Confirm the access window covers the run-up to the real test date.
Official sample materials from ACER, combined with the weekly resources used inside our BSHS HAST preparation strategies plan, are sufficient for most families. A paid bank is a supplement, not a substitute for reviewing every mistake.
How should writing practice fit into the plan?
Written expression is the section that responds fastest to deliberate practice but is the most often neglected. One timed thirty-minute write per week, marked against the HAST four-criterion rubric — ideas and content, organisation, language and vocabulary, conventions — lifts writing scores faster than any other single intervention.
- Plan first. Five minutes of planning at the top of the thirty minutes produces a stronger piece than the same time spent writing without a plan. The strongest pieces almost always have a written outline before the first sentence is drafted.
- Mix forms. Alternate weeks between creative narrative and persuasive writing — the test sets one or the other and neither child nor parent knows which on the day.
- Track structure, not topic. Most marks are won and lost on structure (introduction, body paragraphs, conclusion) rather than on topic. A child writing a polished structure on an unfamiliar topic outperforms a child writing an unstructured piece on a comfortable topic.
How should the abstract reasoning section be practised?
Year 6 candidates sit the full HAST, which adds a thirty-minute abstract reasoning section to the three sections in HAST-P. Abstract reasoning rewards methodical practice with pattern, rotation and matrix puzzles, and it is the single biggest delta versus the Year 5 paper.
A workable weekly routine in months 4–8: two 25-minute timed drill sessions per week covering a mix of rotation, reflection, size, shading and sequence items, plus one mixed-pattern session at the end of the week to build cross-pattern recognition. Year 5 candidates can substitute mental-math and number-pattern drills in the same time slots — the discipline of timed reasoning practice is the same.
When marking abstract reasoning practice, ask the child to name the rule for every item they got right as well as every item they got wrong. A correct guess without a named rule is no more reliable than a wrong answer; only a named rule generalises to the next item type.
What does this mean for preparation?
Start with the official ACER sample paper, build a weekly routine of sectional drills, vocabulary and one timed write, and add full-length mocks at the pace of the four-phase plan. Pair this page with our BSHS HAST exam format overview to understand what each section measures, and with our BSHS HAST preparation strategies plan to see how practice resources fit into a twelve-month build-up.
Key facts.
- Test administrator
- Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER)
- Official sample paper
- 1 free HAST sample from ACER
- Mocks across the plan
- 10–14 full-length papers
- Review time per mock
- 1.5–2 hours
- Writing tasks per week
- 1 timed 30-minute write
Ready to plan your child’s next step?
Speak with a faculty member who teaches this exam. Book a free 15-minute assessment, or return to the full guide for context on programs, dates, and pricing.
