Skip to main content
OC · FAQ

NSW OC Placement Test FAQ: twelve parent questions answered

Twelve of the questions New South Wales families ask most often about the Opportunity Class Placement Test — what the test is, which year your child sits it, eligibility, the three components and their timing, the computer-based format, registration, cost, scaled scoring, the reserve list and whether coaching is needed.

By Braintree Editorial, Braintree Coaching Australia editorial team

Reviewed by Braintree Academic Panel on

Last updated

Quick Answer

Families most often ask what the Opportunity Class test is, which year their child sits it, who is eligible, what the three components measure, how long each takes, whether it is on a computer, what a good scaled score looks like and how the reserve list works. This page answers the twelve we field most frequently and pairs with the Opportunity Class preparation hub for the wider context.

  • Questions answered12
  • Pairs with hub/opportunity-class-preparation
  • Test administratorNSW Department of Education
  • Results timeline~Sept–Oct

Read the full NSW Opportunity Class (OC) Test Preparation for Year 4 Students guide.

The questions below are the twelve Opportunity Class questions our faculty at Braintree Coaching Australia fields most often from New South Wales families preparing their Year 4 child for the OC Placement Test and entry into a Year 5 Opportunity Class. They sit alongside, rather than duplicate, the broader exam-overview answers on our Opportunity Class preparation hub — read the hub first if a fundamentals question (what an Opportunity Class is, which schools run them, how to build a study plan) is still open, then come back here for the deeper, practical questions that follow.

How does this FAQ pair with the other OC spokes?

The FAQ block below covers what the OC test is, the year your child sits it, eligibility, the three components and their timing, the no-writing format, the computer-based delivery, calculators, registration, cost, scaled scoring, what counts as a good score, the reserve list and whether coaching is needed. For the section-by-section walkthrough of every OC component — timing, question counts and what each part asks of your child — see our OC exam format guide spoke. For how scaled scores, statewide ranking and the reserve list work once results arrive, see our OC results and scaled-score interpretation spoke, and for material to build the practice habit, see our OC practice tests and resources spoke. The OC Placement Test is administered by the NSW Department of Education, with test delivery contracted to Cambridge Assessment; confirm the specifics with the Department at the time your child applies.

At a glance

Key facts.

Test
NSW Opportunity Class Placement Test
Sat in
Year 4 (for Year 5 entry)
Components
Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills
Format
Computer-based, ~2 hours total
Writing component
None
Scoring
Scaled scores, statewide ranking
FAQ

Common questions, plainly answered.

12 questions our faculty fields most often about this exam.

General

The Opportunity Class (OC) Placement Test is the assessment used for entry into Opportunity Classes — gifted and high-potential streams that run in Years 5 and 6 at selected New South Wales government primary schools. It is administered by the NSW Department of Education's High Performing Students Unit, with test delivery contracted to Cambridge Assessment, the same pipeline used for the Selective High School Placement Test. The test measures reading, mathematical reasoning and thinking skills, and a placement gives a high-achieving child a peer group and a curriculum pitched to their ability for the final two years of primary school.

Children sit the OC Placement Test in Year 4, and a successful placement begins in Year 5 the following year. The test is taken mid-year, typically around July, so a Year 4 student sits it roughly halfway through that school year and, if offered a place, moves into an Opportunity Class for the start of Year 5. Year 3 students cannot sit the test. There is no Year 5 sitting for Year 6 entry — Year 4 is the single entry point into the two-year Opportunity Class programme.

Any New South Wales student in Year 4 who will be entering Year 5 the following year is eligible to sit the OC Placement Test. Eligibility extends to children in government, non-government and home-schooled settings across NSW, so a child does not need to already attend a government primary school to apply. Distance from an Opportunity Class school does not affect eligibility to sit, though school preferences and proximity can influence which OC school a placement is ultimately at. Year 3 students and students outside NSW are not eligible.

The OC Placement Test has three components, each weighted equally at one third of the total score. Reading runs for about 40 minutes with 14 questions, three of which have multiple parts, covering comprehension, vocabulary in context, inference and author purpose across fiction, non-fiction, poetry and persuasive and informational texts. Mathematical Reasoning runs about 30 minutes with roughly 35 questions on number and patterns, measurement and geometry, statistics and probability, and multi-step logic. Thinking Skills also runs about 30 minutes with roughly 35 questions on verbal and non-verbal reasoning, logical deduction, visual patterns, sequences and matrices. Total testing time is about two hours.

No. The Opportunity Class Placement Test has no writing component. It is made up of three multiple-choice components only — Reading, Mathematical Reasoning and Thinking Skills — and your child is never asked to compose an extended written response. This is one of the practical differences between the OC test and some other selective assessments, and it means preparation focuses on reading comprehension under time pressure, mental mathematics and reasoning rather than essay or narrative writing. The full mark comes entirely from the three multiple-choice papers.

The OC Placement Test is computer-based and has been since 2021. Your child sits it at a designated test centre on a scheduled date, working through all three components on screen rather than on paper. The practical implication for preparation is that a child benefits from practising on a screen — reading passages without annotating in the margin, working mathematics on scrap paper beside the keyboard, and navigating between questions with a mouse or trackpad under timed conditions. Familiarity with the on-screen format removes a layer of unfamiliarity on the day itself.

No. Calculators are not permitted in the Mathematical Reasoning component of the OC Placement Test, so every calculation is done mentally or on the scrap paper provided. The mathematics is designed around reasoning and problem-solving rather than long arithmetic, but quick and accurate mental computation still saves time across roughly 35 questions in about 30 minutes. Regular mental-maths practice — times tables, fractions, percentages and multi-step word problems — is one of the most useful habits to build in the months before the test.

Registration is made through a single online application on the NSW Department of Education portal, lodged by a parent or carer during the application window that opens early in the year, around term one. One application covers the test and lets you nominate school preferences. The Department sets and publishes the application fee for each cycle, and fee exemptions or assistance may be available for eligible families experiencing financial hardship — check the current amount and any concession arrangements on the Department's website at the time you apply, as the published fee is the authoritative figure.

OC results are reported as scaled scores rather than raw marks, which lets the Department compare performance fairly across years even when one paper is harder than another. Your child receives a scaled score for each of the three components and a total scaled score, commonly reported on a range up to 300, with each component contributing one third. Students are then ranked across the whole state by total scaled score, and that statewide ranking, together with your nominated school preferences and to a lesser extent distance, determines whether a placement offer is made.

A good OC score is best understood as a total scaled score high enough to fall above the placement cut-off at one of your nominated schools, rather than a fixed number that applies every year. Because students are ranked statewide and offers flow down the ranked list until each school's places are filled, the effective threshold moves each cycle with the strength of the cohort and differs between schools, with the most sought-after schools requiring higher scores. Balanced performance across all three components is more reliable than a single very strong component, since each contributes one third of the total.

The reserve list is a ranked waiting list of students who were not made an initial placement offer but remain in contention if offered places are declined. After the first round of offers, some families accept places elsewhere or decline, and the Department then makes further offers to students on the reserve list in ranked order as vacancies open up. A child on the reserve list has not been unsuccessful — they are next in line and may receive an offer weeks or even months later. The three possible outcomes are a placement offer, a place on the reserve list, or unsuccessful.

No child needs coaching to sit the OC Placement Test, and a placement is not the only measure of a capable child. Some families prepare independently using practice material and a steady reading habit, while others find that structured preparation helps a child manage the timing, the on-screen format and the unfamiliar Thinking Skills questions with less stress. The most useful preparation builds genuine reasoning and reading skill over months rather than cramming, and it is worth being honest about whether the time commitment suits your child and your family before committing to it.

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.

No card, no obligation. Held over Zoom or in centre.
Talk to a coachRead the full guide before booking.