"Once my son understood that there were actually different categories of comprehension questions — and that each one needed a different strategy — everything clicked. His reading scores jumped from the 60th to the 91st percentile in eight weeks." — Michelle T., Parent of 2025 James Ruse Offer Recipient
About This Guide
This guide covers all comprehension question types tested in Australian selective school exams, including the NSW Selective High School Placement Test, the NSW Opportunity Class (OC) test, and the HAST (Higher Ability Selection Test) used in Queensland and the ACT. All examples are written at Year 5–6 level, consistent with selective entry test difficulty.
Comprehension Question Types: Your Complete Selective Test Guide
Reading comprehension is worth 25% of your child's total score in the NSW Selective High School Placement Test — and it's the component where strategic preparation makes the biggest difference. Yet most families approach reading practise without understanding the single most important insight: not all comprehension questions are the same.
There are distinct types of comprehension questions, and each type requires a fundamentally different thinking skill. A student who can retrieve explicit information from a text (a literal question) may still struggle with a question that requires reading between the lines (an inferential question). And neither of those skills will help with a question asking a student to evaluate the author's craft or justify an opinion with textual evidence.
The good news? Once your child learns to identify which type of question they're being asked, they can apply the right strategy — and their accuracy increases dramatically.
In this guide, you'll discover:
- All five comprehension question types tested in Australian selective school exams
- Exactly how each type appears in the NSW Selective, OC, and HAST tests
- Step-by-step strategies for answering each question type correctly
- 15+ worked example questions with a full sample passage and detailed explanations
- Common mistakes students make — and precisely how to avoid them
- A structured practice plan for Year 4, 5, and 6 students
Everything you need to master comprehension question types
Click any section above to jump directly to that content
Why Understanding Question Types Changes Everything
Here is a scenario that plays out across thousands of households each year. A Year 5 student reads widely, comprehends what they read, and consistently performs well in school English. They sit their first selective test practice paper — and are surprised to find that several reading comprehension questions feel genuinely difficult. They get the right answer for "What did the character do first?" but struggle with "Why did the author include this detail?" and "What does the word 'reluctant' suggest about the character's feelings?"
These students aren't poor readers. They simply haven't been taught that different questions test different skills — and that each skill requires deliberate, separate practice.
Reading Comprehension in Australian Selective Tests
Why this component is critical to master
of Total Selective Score
The Reading component is equally weighted with Maths, Thinking Skills, and Writing
Reading Questions
NSW Selective test: 30 multiple-choice questions across 4 passages
Question Types
Five distinct comprehension question types, each requiring different strategies
Minutes
Total time for reading — roughly 80 seconds per question
Understanding the taxonomy of comprehension questions — how they differ, what thinking they demand, and how to approach each — is one of the highest-leverage skills a selective school candidate can develop. The sections below break down each question type in depth.
Type 1: Literal Comprehension Questions
What They Are
Literal comprehension questions ask students to locate and retrieve information that is explicitly stated in the text. The answer is directly present in the passage — you don't need to infer, interpret, or evaluate anything. You simply need to find it.
These are sometimes called "right there" questions because the answer is right there on the page.
How to Recognise Them
Literal questions typically use phrasing like:
- "According to the text, what did...?"
- "The passage states that...?"
- "How many / how long / when did...?"
- "Which of the following is mentioned in the text?"
- "What is the main purpose of the [programme / organisation / character]?"
What Makes Them Tricky in Selective Tests
Here's a critical insight: literal questions in selective school tests are not always easy, even though the answer is explicitly stated. The challenge usually lies in one of three places:
- Paraphrasing — The question words the information differently from the text. Students who search for matching words often miss it.
- Distractor options — Multiple-choice options are carefully crafted to include plausible-sounding incorrect answers that contain words from the text.
- Scanning speed — Under time pressure, students may misread the passage or scan too quickly and locate the wrong section.
Literal Question Strategy
When answering a literal question, always return to the text and locate the specific sentence that contains the answer — don't rely on memory. Underline or mentally mark the evidence. Then compare that sentence to each answer option, looking for meaning matches (not just word matches).
Type 2: Inferential Comprehension Questions
What They Are
Inferential comprehension questions require students to go beyond what is explicitly stated and draw conclusions, make deductions, or understand implied meanings. These questions test whether a student can combine clues within the text to arrive at a logical conclusion.
Inference is the skill of reading between the lines — understanding what the author means without saying it directly.
How to Recognise Them
Inferential questions typically include phrasing like:
- "What can be inferred from...?"
- "What does this suggest about...?"
- "Why did the character most likely...?"
- "What is implied by the phrase...?"
- "Based on the information in the passage, we can conclude that...?"
- "What would probably happen if...?"
Why This Is the Most Important Question Type to Master
Inferential questions are the primary differentiator in selective school reading tests. In the NSW Selective test, roughly 40–50% of reading questions involve inference at some level. Students who consistently answer literal questions correctly but struggle with inference are held back from top-percentile scores.
Inference draws on several sub-skills:
- Cause and effect reasoning — understanding what led to an outcome
- Character motivation — understanding why a character acts or feels a certain way
- Tone and mood inference — detecting the emotional register of a passage from word choices
- Implicit information — identifying what the author has left unsaid but clearly implies
- Predictive thinking — using evidence to anticipate what would happen next
Common Inferential Mistake
The most frequent error with inferential questions is choosing an answer that feels reasonable or is generally true — but isn't supported by the specific text. Every inference must be grounded in textual evidence. Ask: "Where in the passage does it support this conclusion?"
Type 3: Evaluative and Critical Questions
What They Are
Evaluative and critical comprehension questions ask students to make judgements about the text, the author's choices, or the ideas presented. These questions don't have a single right answer based purely on facts — they require students to analyse, assess, and reason about the text from a more distanced perspective.
How to Recognise Them
Look for phrasing such as:
- "What is the author's purpose in...?"
- "Why has the author used this technique?"
- "What is the author's attitude towards...?"
- "Which of the following best describes the tone of the passage?"
- "How does the inclusion of [detail] affect the reader?"
- "What is the most effective evidence the author provides to support...?"
- "Do you agree with the author's argument? Use evidence to justify your response."
What Skills These Questions Test
Evaluative questions assess a student's ability to step back from the content and think about how the text works:
- Author's purpose — persuading, informing, entertaining, or a combination
- Point of view and perspective — whose voice is dominant and what bias exists
- Tone — the emotional attitude of the writing (serious, humorous, ironic, melancholic)
- Effectiveness of evidence — whether the author's arguments are well-supported
- Language choice analysis — why specific words or phrases create specific effects
Evaluative Questions in OC vs Selective Tests
Evaluative questions appear in both OC and Selective tests, but at different levels of complexity. OC tests (Year 4–5 level) typically ask about author's purpose in straightforward terms. Selective tests (Year 6 level) require more sophisticated analysis of technique, tone, and the relationship between language choices and effect on the reader.
Type 4: Vocabulary in Context Questions
What They Are
Vocabulary in context questions ask students to determine the meaning of a word or phrase as it is used within the passage — not the word's general definition, but its specific meaning in that context.
This distinction is critical. Many words have multiple meanings, and the correct answer depends entirely on how the word is used in the specific passage.
How to Recognise Them
These questions typically ask:
- "As used in paragraph 2, the word '...' most closely means...?"
- "Which word is closest in meaning to '...' as used in the text?"
- "The phrase '...' in line 8 suggests that...?"
- "What does the author mean by '...'?"
Why Students Lose Marks on These Questions
Two patterns cause most errors on vocabulary questions:
- Choosing the most common meaning of the word rather than the meaning that fits the context
- Ignoring connotation — the positive, negative, or neutral flavour a word carries in context
For example, the word "cool" could mean temperature, trendy slang, emotionally reserved, or admirably calm — and the correct answer depends entirely on the surrounding text.
Strategy for Vocabulary Questions
- Read the sentence containing the target word, plus the sentence before and after it
- Cover the word and predict what meaning would fit that sentence
- Match your prediction to the answer options — don't simply look for dictionary definitions
- Eliminate options that introduce meanings not supported by context
Type 5: Text Structure and Language Feature Questions
What They Are
Text structure and language feature questions ask students to identify and analyse how a text is organised, what structural or literary techniques are used, and what effect those choices have. These are sometimes called "analytical" or "craft" questions.
How to Recognise Them
These questions may ask:
- "What is the main purpose of paragraph 3?"
- "Which organisational structure does the author use?"
- "The author uses a rhetorical question in paragraph 2. What is its effect?"
- "What technique does the author use in the phrase '...'?"
- "How does the opening paragraph set up the rest of the passage?"
- "What is the function of the contrast in the final paragraph?"
What Students Need to Know
To answer these questions well, students should understand basic text structure concepts:
- Text types: narrative, exposition, recount, discussion, procedure, information report
- Structural features: introduction, body, conclusion; orientation, complication, resolution
- Language techniques: simile, metaphor, personification, alliteration, rhetorical question, hyperbole, emotive language, inclusive language (we/our)
- Paragraph functions: topic sentence, supporting detail, counter-argument, conclusion
Building Language Technique Knowledge
Students don't need to memorise every literary device. Focus on the ten most commonly tested techniques: simile, metaphor, personification, alliteration, rhetorical question, hyperbole, repetition, emotive language, inclusive language, and direct address. For each one, know what it is and what effect it typically creates.
How Question Types Appear Across Australian Tests
Understanding which question types are most prevalent in each test helps you focus your preparation strategically.
Comprehension Question Types by Australian Test
Distribution across NSW Selective, OC, and HAST
| Literal Comprehension | 20–25% of questions | 30–35% of questions |
| Inferential Comprehension | 40–50% of questions | 30–35% of questions |
| Evaluative / Critical | 15–20% of questions | 10–15% of questions |
| Vocabulary in Context | 10–15% of questions | 15–20% of questions |
| Text Structure / Language | 10–15% of questions | 5–10% of questions |
NSW Selective High School Placement Test
The NSW Selective reading component presents four passages across 40 minutes, with 30 multiple-choice questions total. Passages include fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and persuasive texts. The emphasis on inferential and evaluative questions is significantly greater than in most school-based reading assessments, which is why students often find the jump to selective-test difficulty so pronounced.
NSW Opportunity Class (OC) Test
The OC test targets Year 4–5 students and is conducted in Year 4. Reading questions lean more heavily on literal retrieval and basic inference, with less emphasis on author's craft and text structure. However, the vocabulary questions in OC tests often feature sophisticated academic vocabulary that surprises unprepared students.
HAST (Higher Ability Selection Test)
Used in Queensland selective schools (QASMT, Brisbane State High, etc.) and some ACT schools, HAST reading is comparable in difficulty to the NSW Selective test. It places particular emphasis on making connections within and beyond the text, requiring students to synthesise information from across an entire passage.
15 Worked Example Questions
The following questions are based on a sample passage. Read the passage carefully, then work through each question using the strategies outlined.
Sample Passage: "The Ocean's Invisible Enemy"
Every year, approximately eight million tonnes of plastic enter the world's oceans. Much of this plastic eventually breaks down — not into harmless substances, but into tiny fragments called microplastics, particles smaller than five millimetres that are extraordinarily difficult to remove once dispersed.
Marine biologist Dr Sylvia Chen has dedicated thirty years to studying the effects of microplastics on ocean ecosystems. "The insidious thing about microplastics," she explained during a recent interview, "is that they look like food to many marine creatures. Fish, seabirds, and even filter feeders like whales ingest them in vast quantities."
The consequences extend beyond marine life. Research published in 2023 found microplastics in human blood, lungs, and even the placentas of unborn children. Scientists are not yet certain what long-term effects this exposure may cause, but the discovery prompted urgent calls for international regulation of single-use plastics.
Despite mounting evidence, global progress has been frustratingly slow. Of the 193 United Nations member states, fewer than 80 have enacted meaningful restrictions on single-use plastics. Those countries that have acted — including Australia, France, and Rwanda — have demonstrated that rapid change is achievable when political will exists.
Dr Chen remains cautiously optimistic. "Every piece of plastic we prevent from entering the ocean is a victory," she says. "The ocean is extraordinarily resilient, given time. But time is precisely what we're running out of."
Literal Comprehension Questions
Question 1
According to the passage, approximately how much plastic enters the world's oceans each year?
- A) Eight million tonnes
- B) Eight billion tonnes
- C) Five million tonnes
- D) Eight hundred thousand tonnes
Answer: A
Worked Explanation: The first sentence states explicitly: "approximately eight million tonnes of plastic enter the world's oceans." This is a direct retrieval question. Students who read carefully will find the answer without difficulty. The distractor (B) includes the correct number but a different unit — a common trap in literal questions.
Question 2
What are microplastics?
- A) Plastic products smaller than five centimetres
- B) Plastic fragments smaller than five millimetres
- C) Plastic that dissolves into ocean water
- D) Plastic particles found only in human blood
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: The passage defines microplastics as "tiny fragments called microplastics, particles smaller than five millimetres." Option A confuses millimetres with centimetres. Option C contradicts the text (plastic breaks down into fragments, not dissolved substances). Option D is partially drawn from later in the passage but incorrectly limits the definition.
Question 3
How many of the 193 United Nations member states have enacted meaningful restrictions on single-use plastics?
- A) Fewer than 80
- B) More than 100
- C) Exactly 80
- D) 193
Answer: A
Worked Explanation: Paragraph four states "fewer than 80 have enacted meaningful restrictions." This is straightforward literal retrieval, though students must read carefully: the passage says "fewer than 80," not "exactly 80."
Inferential Comprehension Questions
Question 4
Why does Dr Chen describe microplastics as "insidious"?
- A) Because they are invisible to the naked eye
- B) Because they are difficult to study under laboratory conditions
- C) Because they cause harm in a subtle, hard-to-detect way
- D) Because they are created from innocent-seeming everyday products
Answer: C
Worked Explanation: "Insidious" means causing harm gradually and subtly in a way that is not immediately obvious. Dr Chen uses it to explain that microplastics deceive marine creatures by resembling food — a gradual, hidden harm. The word is not about invisibility (A) or laboratory difficulty (B). Option D is plausible but not supported by Dr Chen's explanation; she focuses on how microplastics affect marine life, not on their origin.
Question 5
What can we infer about countries that have NOT restricted single-use plastics?
- A) They do not have the technical capability to do so
- B) They are unaware of the scientific evidence
- C) They have chosen not to prioritise plastic restriction despite evidence
- D) They are waiting for a binding United Nations resolution
Answer: C
Worked Explanation: The passage states that countries that have acted "have demonstrated that rapid change is achievable when political will exists." This implies that the obstacle for non-acting countries is not capability or awareness — since the passage describes "mounting evidence" — but a lack of political will. Options A, B, and D introduce reasons not supported by the text.
Question 6
Based on the passage, what is most likely to happen if no further action is taken on microplastics?
- A) Marine life will adapt and begin filtering microplastics naturally
- B) The ocean will lose its capacity to recover from microplastic contamination
- C) Scientists will develop effective technology to remove microplastics
- D) International agreements will be reached within the next decade
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: Dr Chen states that "the ocean is extraordinarily resilient, given time. But time is precisely what we're running out of." This implies that without action, time will run out before the ocean can recover. No evidence in the passage supports adaptation (A), technological solutions (C), or imminent international agreements (D).
Question 7
What does the phrase "cautiously optimistic" suggest about Dr Chen's outlook?
- A) She is confident that the situation will improve quickly
- B) She believes improvement is possible but is worried about the pace of change
- C) She is pessimistic about the future of ocean health
- D) She is uncertain whether microplastics are genuinely harmful
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: "Cautiously optimistic" combines qualified hope (optimistic) with careful reservation (cautiously). Dr Chen's closing words support this: she sees every prevention as a victory but acknowledges that time is running out. This is a two-part word analysis requiring inference about emotional register.
Question 8
Why does the author mention microplastics being found in human blood and placentas?
- A) To prove that microplastics are more common in humans than in marine animals
- B) To show that microplastic contamination is now a human health issue, not just an environmental one
- C) To argue that humans are more vulnerable to microplastics than marine life
- D) To suggest that scientists have been too slow to study microplastics
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: The placement of this information in the passage broadens the issue from marine ecology to human health — a rhetorical choice designed to engage readers who may not feel connected to ocean conservation. The passage does not claim humans are more affected than marine animals (C), nor does it criticise scientists (D).
Evaluative and Critical Questions
Question 9
What is the primary purpose of this passage?
- A) To entertain readers with a story about a marine biologist
- B) To describe the biology of ocean ecosystems
- C) To persuade readers that plastic pollution is a serious problem requiring urgent action
- D) To outline the technical process of how plastics become microplastics
Answer: C
Worked Explanation: The passage is persuasive-informational. It uses scientific data, expert testimony, and an appeal to personal relevance (human health) to build a case for urgent action on plastic pollution. It is not primarily entertaining (A), purely descriptive of ecosystems (B), or a technical explanation of degradation processes (D).
Question 10
How does including Dr Chen's direct quotes strengthen the passage?
- A) They make the passage easier to read by breaking up long paragraphs
- B) They provide expert credibility and add a human voice to the scientific claims
- C) They allow the author to avoid taking a personal position on the issue
- D) They provide statistical evidence that would otherwise be missing
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: Direct quotes from an expert in the field lend authority (ethos) to the argument and make the writing more immediate and personal. Option A is partially true as a stylistic effect but is not the primary purpose. Option C is incorrect — the author does take a position. Option D is wrong — statistics come from research findings, not Dr Chen's quotes.
Question 11
What is the tone of the final paragraph?
- A) Resigned and defeated
- B) Hopeful but urgent
- C) Satisfied and celebratory
- D) Neutral and objective
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: Dr Chen's closing quote expresses optimism ("Every piece of plastic we prevent from entering the ocean is a victory") combined with urgency ("time is precisely what we're running out of"). This "hopeful but urgent" tone is deliberate — it avoids leaving the reader despairing while still conveying the seriousness of the situation.
Vocabulary in Context Questions
Question 12
As used in paragraph 3, the word "prompted" most closely means:
- A) Reminded
- B) Forced
- C) Triggered
- D) Discouraged
Answer: C
Worked Explanation: In context, "the discovery prompted urgent calls for international regulation" means the discovery set off or triggered those calls. "Reminded" (A) implies the calls existed before, which the context doesn't suggest. "Forced" (B) implies compulsion, which is too strong. "Discouraged" (D) is the opposite of the intended meaning.
Question 13
The word "resilient" in the final paragraph most closely means:
- A) Fragile and easily damaged
- B) Able to recover from difficulty
- C) Slow to change
- D) Unpredictable in behaviour
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: In context, "the ocean is extraordinarily resilient, given time" contrasts with the concern that time is running out. "Resilient" here means capable of recovering from damage — a positive quality that is nonetheless contingent on having sufficient time. This is a standard vocabulary-in-context question that tests whether students know this academic vocabulary item.
Text Structure and Language Feature Questions
Question 14
Why does the author begin the passage with a specific statistic?
- A) To demonstrate the author's scientific expertise
- B) To immediately establish the scale and seriousness of the problem
- C) To contrast with the optimistic tone of the conclusion
- D) To introduce Dr Chen's research findings
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: Opening with a striking statistic ("eight million tonnes") is a deliberate structural choice to immediately communicate scale and urgency. It positions the reader to understand that this is a significant issue before any argument is made. This is a text structure question requiring students to analyse the function of the opening, not just its content.
Question 15
What technique does the author use in the phrase "the ocean's invisible enemy" (the title)?
- A) Simile
- B) Alliteration
- C) Personification and metaphor
- D) Rhetorical question
Answer: C
Worked Explanation: The title uses metaphor (plastic pollution is called an "enemy," a human concept applied to a substance) and implicitly personification (the ocean has an enemy as if it were a living being under threat). Neither simile (which requires "like" or "as"), alliteration (same initial consonants), nor rhetorical question applies here.
Bonus Question 16
How does the structure of the passage move the reader from concern to action?
- A) By starting with solutions and building to the problem
- B) By presenting the problem, widening its relevance, showing limited response, then ending with conditional hope
- C) By comparing different countries' approaches in chronological order
- D) By focusing entirely on scientific data and leaving the reader to draw conclusions
Answer: B
Worked Explanation: The passage follows a classic persuasive structure: introduce the environmental problem (paragraphs 1–2) → expand its relevance to humans (paragraph 3) → reveal the inadequate global response (paragraph 4) → close with conditional optimism that implies urgency (paragraph 5). Recognising this macro-structure requires the student to hold the whole passage in mind simultaneously — a hallmark of high-level comprehension.
Strategies for Each Question Type
The Four-Step Method for Any Comprehension Question
Classify the question
Read the question stem carefully. Identify which type it is: literal, inferential, evaluative, vocabulary, or text structure. This tells you where to look and how to think.
Return to the text
Never answer from memory alone. Go back to the specific section of the passage relevant to the question. For literal questions, locate the exact sentence. For inference questions, identify the clues that point to a conclusion.
Eliminate wrong answers
In multiple-choice, look for answers that: (a) contradict the text, (b) go beyond what the text supports, (c) are partially correct but include an error, or (d) use words from the text in a misleading way.
Verify your answer
Before selecting, check: Is this answer directly supported by the text? Does it match the question stem? Is it the best answer, or just a possible one? The best answer is always supported by the strongest textual evidence.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: Answering from Prior Knowledge
The problem: Students bring in knowledge from outside the passage — things they already know about the topic — and choose answers based on general truth rather than textual evidence.
The fix: Every answer in a comprehension test must be justified by the text. Ask yourself: "Where in the passage does it say this?" If you can't point to a specific section, the answer is wrong regardless of whether it's true in real life.
Mistake 2: Choosing Partially Correct Answers
The problem: Test designers deliberately craft distractor options that contain some accurate information but include one element that contradicts the text. Students who read quickly often miss the error and select these.
The fix: Read every part of each option. An answer that is 80% correct but contains one false element is completely wrong.
Mistake 3: Treating Inferential Questions Like Literal Ones
The problem: Students go back to the passage looking for an explicit answer to an inferential question. When they can't find the words they're looking for, they become confused or guess.
The fix: For inferential questions, you won't find the answer word-for-word in the text. Instead, look for clues — character actions, author's word choices, contrasts, cause-effect relationships — and reason from those clues to a justified conclusion.
Mistake 4: Skipping the Question Stem
The problem: Students read the answer options first, then skim the question, then make a selection. This leads to misreading what the question actually asks.
The fix: Always read the complete question stem first, before looking at the options. Identify exactly what is being asked. Only then look at the options.
Mistake 5: Not Managing Time Strategically
The problem: Students spend too long on difficult questions early in the passage and run out of time for later questions that may have been easier.
The fix: If a question is taking more than 90 seconds, flag it and move on. Return to it at the end. A question you skip and guess has a 25% chance of being correct; a question you abandon has 0%.
The Biggest Selective Test Reading Mistake
The most damaging error we see in students' reading results is over-relying on intuition and not returning to the text to verify answers. Students who read once and then answer from memory are dramatically less accurate than students who return to the text for every question, even if it feels slower. In a 40-minute test, verification takes seconds — and it changes results significantly.
Building Your Comprehension Practice Plan
12-Week Comprehension Mastery Plan (Year 5–6)
Phase 1: Foundation Skills
Objectives
- Identify the five question types with confidence
- Learn the four-step method for answering questions
- Build vocabulary of literary and structural terms
Key Activities
- Practise classifying questions by type using 2–3 passages per week
- Read one non-fiction article and one fiction extract daily
- Complete 10 vocabulary-in-context exercises per week
Phase 2: Targeted Practice
Objectives
- Achieve 90%+ accuracy on literal questions
- Develop consistent inference strategies
- Improve vocabulary breadth through wide reading
Key Activities
- Complete 2 timed passages per week (one fiction, one non-fiction)
- Focus one session per week on inferential questions only
- Review every incorrect answer and identify the reason for the error
Phase 3: Exam Simulation
Objectives
- Complete full reading sections under timed conditions
- Build stamina for 40-minute reading sessions
- Reduce error rate on all five question types
Key Activities
- Weekly full reading simulation (4 passages, 30 questions, 40 minutes)
- Track accuracy by question type and target weak areas
- Analyse challenging passages with a coach or parent
Phase 4: Refinement
Objectives
- Optimise time management strategies
- Consolidate performance across all question types
- Build confidence through consistent accurate performance
Key Activities
- Final mock tests under full exam conditions
- Review and consolidate vocabulary and technique lists
- Focus on mental stamina and test-day confidence
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- ✓Enhances comprehension and precise word use
- ✓Improves persuasive and creative writing expression
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- ✓3 Reading Comprehension tests
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- ✓Detailed explanations for every question
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- ✓18 narrative writing prompts across genres like mystery, suspense, and fantasy
- ✓Learn key storytelling techniques to build tension
- ✓Flexible and self-paced, perfect for busy students
- ✓Ideal for creative writing exams and competitions
- ✓Engaging exercises to expand writing abilities
- ✓Expert-led lessons to guide you step-by-step
- ✓Receive personalised feedback, sample responses, and vocabulary usage examples to refine your skills
- ✓Comprehensive curriculum for all skill levels
- ✓180 days of unlimited access to all resources

- ✓Foundation + Advanced Vocabulary Courses
- ✓50+ targeted, topic-wise vocabulary practice test sets
- ✓1,000+ high-impact, exam-relevant words with contextual sentences and model usage
- ✓Multiple formats: multiple-choice, sentence application, usage tasks
- ✓Detailed answers, explanations, and progress tracking
- ✓Enhances comprehension and precise word use
- ✓Improves persuasive and creative writing expression
- ✓90 days of unlimited access to all resources
- ✓200+ Vocabulary Words
- ✓Sentence Usage & Quizzes
- ✓Self-paced Learning
- ✓Lifetime Access
- ✓Email Support

- ✓Access 95 solved non-verbal reasoning test papers online
- ✓Expert-designed questions mirroring real exam challenges
- ✓Covers 14 key topics including analogies, matrices, and 3D shapes
- ✓Practice over 1,900 questions with detailed answers
- ✓Boost exam speed, accuracy, and time management skills
- ✓Suitable for all major selective school and scholarship exams in Australia
- ✓Online platform to track progress and review performance
- ✓90 days of unlimited access to all resources
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between literal and inferential comprehension?
Literal comprehension involves retrieving information that is explicitly stated in the text — the answer is directly there in the passage. Inferential comprehension requires the reader to go beyond what is stated and draw conclusions from clues, context, and implied meaning. In selective school tests, inferential questions are typically more numerous and more challenging than literal ones.
How many comprehension question types are there?
For the purposes of selective school test preparation, there are five key question types: literal comprehension, inferential comprehension, evaluative and critical thinking, vocabulary in context, and text structure and language feature questions. Each type requires a different thinking approach and benefits from specific practice strategies.
At what year level should children start practising comprehension question types?
Students preparing for the NSW OC test (taken in Year 4) should begin structured comprehension practice in Year 3–4. Students targeting the Selective High School test (taken in Year 6) should begin systematic comprehension practice in Year 5 at the latest, with 12 months of preparation being ideal for students aiming at top-tier schools.
Are comprehension skills tested differently in the OC test versus the Selective test?
Yes. The OC test places greater emphasis on literal comprehension and basic vocabulary, consistent with a Year 4–5 level. The NSW Selective test features a much higher proportion of inferential and evaluative questions, along with more complex texts including poetry and sophisticated non-fiction. Students progressing from OC preparation to Selective preparation will need to build more advanced inference and analysis skills.
How can I tell which question type a comprehension question is?
The most reliable method is to read the question stem carefully and identify the thinking it requires. Questions asking "what does the text say" or "according to the passage" are literal. Questions asking "why," "what can be inferred," or "what does this suggest" are inferential. Questions asking about author's purpose, tone, or technique are evaluative. With practise, question classification becomes automatic.
How much time should Year 5–6 students spend on reading comprehension preparation per week?
For students targeting the NSW Selective test, we recommend 3–4 hours per week dedicated to reading comprehension, divided across several sessions. This should include both guided practice with analysis of correct and incorrect answers, and independent wide reading for general comprehension development. Quality matters more than quantity: 30 focused minutes of analysed practice is more valuable than 2 hours of passive reading.
What types of texts appear in the NSW Selective reading test?
The NSW Selective reading test includes multiple text types across four passages. Students will typically encounter at least one fictional extract, one non-fiction article or information text, and may also encounter poetry, persuasive writing, or hybrid texts that blend features of multiple genres. Practising with a wide variety of text types is essential preparation.
Do vocabulary question answers need to come from the text?
Yes — this is the key principle of vocabulary in context questions. Even if you know what a word means in general, the correct answer must reflect how the word is used in the specific passage. Many vocabulary questions feature words with multiple meanings, and only one meaning will be supported by the context of the passage.
Comprehension Preparation Resources
Start building your child's reading comprehension skills today
Free Reading Comprehension Practice Tests
Access free practice passages with questions across all five comprehension question types, designed at selective school difficulty level
Access ResourceNSW Selective Test Components Guide
Complete breakdown of all four NSW Selective test components: Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing
Access ResourceFree Diagnostic Assessment
Identify your child's strengths and gaps across all reading question types with our complimentary assessment pack
Access ResourceSelective School Preparation Programme
Comprehensive preparation covering reading comprehension, mathematical reasoning, thinking skills, and writing with expert BrainTree coaching
Access ResourceThinking Skills Development Guide
Master the logical reasoning, pattern recognition, and spatial skills that differentiate top selective school candidates
Access ResourceHave questions about reading comprehension preparation for your child? Contact our team or explore our Selective School Preparation Programme for expert, structured coaching.
