"We spent months searching for the right practice papers, but half of them were based on the old format. Once we found materials that matched the actual computer-based test, our daughter's confidence and scores improved dramatically." — Priya M., Parent of Year 6 Student, Parramatta
📋 Data Sources for This Guide
All test format details, component weightings, and timing information referenced in this guide are sourced from the NSW Department of Education's official selective high school placement documentation and Cambridge Assessment Admissions Testing specifications. BrainTree Coaching does not fabricate statistics or percentages.
What Are Selective Past Papers and How Should You Use Them?
Selective past papers and practice tests are timed question sets that mirror the NSW Selective High School Placement Test format — covering Reading (45 min), Mathematical Reasoning (40 min), Thinking Skills (40 min), and Writing (30 min). The most effective way to use selective test practice papers is through a three-stage approach: start with untimed diagnostic papers to identify strengths and weaknesses, progress to timed single-component practice to build speed, and finish with full 155-minute simulations under exam conditions. Always review every error after each paper — categorising mistakes as careless, knowledge-gap, strategy, or time-pressure errors — to direct your preparation towards the highest-impact areas. Choose papers that match the current computer-based, four-component format rather than outdated pen-and-paper materials.
NSW Selective Test Practice Papers: Your Complete 2026 Preparation Guide
If your child is preparing for the NSW selective high school placement test in 2026, you already know that selective past papers are one of the most important tools in your preparation toolkit. But not all practice papers are created equal — and knowing how to use them matters just as much as having them in the first place.
The selective test has evolved significantly in recent years. It is now a computer-based assessment developed by Cambridge Assessment, running for 155 minutes across four distinct components. With approximately 4,248 places available across 47 selective schools for more than 17,000 applicants each year, the competition is intense. The right practice materials, used strategically, can make a meaningful difference to your child's readiness and confidence on test day.
This guide walks you through everything you need to know about selective test past papers and selective test practice in 2026 — from understanding the exact test format to choosing the right materials, avoiding common preparation mistakes, and building a timeline that works.
In this guide, you'll discover:
- The exact 2026 selective test format, including timing and weighting for all four components
- What each component looks like and the types of questions your child will face
- The different types of practice papers available and how they compare
- A proven strategy for using practice papers effectively under timed conditions
- The most common mistakes parents make with practice papers (and how to avoid them)
- When to introduce practice papers in your child's preparation timeline
- How to track progress and identify areas that need focused attention
- Where to access free mock tests and sample questions to get started
Navigate to the sections most relevant to your child's preparation stage.
Click any section above to jump directly to that content
What the 2026 Selective Test Format Looks Like
Before diving into practice papers, it is essential to understand exactly what your child will face on test day. The NSW selective high school placement test is a computer-based assessment administered by Cambridge Assessment Admissions Testing. Your child will sit the test at an external test centre, completing all four components on a computer.
2026 NSW Selective Test at a Glance
Key facts every parent should know before choosing practice materials
Total Test Duration
Across all four components with no breaks between sections
Test Components
Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing
Equal Weighting
Each component contributes exactly 25% to the overall score
Typing Speed Required
Your child must be comfortable typing at this speed for the Writing task
The four components are Reading (17 questions including 3 multi-part questions, 45 minutes), Mathematical Reasoning (35 questions, 40 minutes), Thinking Skills (40 questions, 40 minutes), and Writing (1 extended task, 30 minutes). Each component is weighted equally at 25% of the total score.
This equal weighting is crucial for your practice paper strategy. Some students naturally excel at mathematics but find the writing component challenging, or vice versa. Because each component carries the same weight, neglecting any single area can significantly impact the overall result. Your practice paper selection should cover all four components with equal seriousness.
⚠️ Computer-Based Format Matters
Many older practice papers were designed for the previous pen-and-paper test format. The 2026 test is entirely computer-based, which affects how students interact with reading passages, select answers, and compose their writing task. Ensure your practice materials reflect this digital format, or at minimum, have your child practise answering on screen rather than circling answers on paper.
One detail that catches many families off guard is the typing requirement. The Writing component requires your child to type their response, and students who type slowly will have less time to plan, draft, and edit their work. If your child is not yet comfortable typing at 30 to 35 words per minute, building this skill should be part of your preparation plan alongside practice papers.
Component-by-Component Breakdown: What Questions Look Like
Understanding what each component tests — and the style of questions involved — helps you evaluate whether your practice papers are genuinely preparing your child for the real thing.
Reading (45 minutes — 25%)
The Reading component presents your child with 17 questions across 3 multi-part passages. These are not simple comprehension questions. Students must demonstrate the ability to interpret, infer, analyse, and evaluate across a range of text types including fiction, non-fiction, and persuasive writing.
Questions typically require students to identify the author's purpose, understand vocabulary in context, draw inferences from implicit information, and compare or synthesise ideas across different parts of a passage. The passages are deliberately chosen to be challenging, often at or slightly above the expected reading level for Year 6 students.
What to look for in practice papers: Multi-part passages with questions that go beyond literal comprehension. Look for materials that include inference questions, vocabulary-in-context questions, and questions requiring students to evaluate an author's argument or identify tone.
Mathematical Reasoning (40 minutes — 25%)
With 35 questions in 40 minutes, Mathematical Reasoning demands both accuracy and speed. Your child has just over one minute per question on average, which means efficient problem-solving strategies are essential. This component tests mathematical concepts from the NSW syllabus but frames them as reasoning problems rather than straightforward calculations.
Students will encounter questions involving number and algebra, measurement and geometry, statistics and probability, and pattern recognition. The emphasis is on reasoning — understanding why a mathematical approach works, not just executing a procedure. No calculators are permitted.
What to look for in practice papers: Questions that require multi-step thinking, not just computation. Good practice materials present mathematical concepts in unfamiliar contexts, requiring students to identify which approach to use before solving.
Thinking Skills (40 minutes — 25%)
The Thinking Skills component is often the most unfamiliar to students and parents. With 40 questions in 40 minutes, it assesses abstract and non-verbal reasoning abilities. This component is designed to measure underlying cognitive skills rather than learned knowledge, though targeted practice can absolutely improve performance.
Questions involve pattern recognition, spatial reasoning, logical deduction, sequences, and analogies. Students work with shapes, figures, and abstract patterns rather than words or numbers. This component is sometimes described as the hardest to prepare for, but structured practice with the right materials can build familiarity and confidence.
What to look for in practice papers: Abstract reasoning questions using shapes, patterns, and spatial relationships. Avoid materials that rely too heavily on verbal reasoning for this component — the actual test focuses on non-verbal and abstract reasoning.
Writing (30 minutes — 25%)
The Writing component requires students to produce one extended writing task in 30 minutes. Students type their response on the computer, making typing speed and accuracy a practical consideration alongside writing quality. Tasks may be narrative, persuasive, or informative in nature.
Markers assess the quality of ideas, the structure and coherence of the response, vocabulary and expression, spelling and grammar, and the overall effectiveness of the piece. A well-structured response that demonstrates sophisticated vocabulary and clear reasoning will score higher than a long but rambling one.
What to look for in practice papers: A variety of writing prompts across different genres. Practice materials should encourage your child to plan, draft, and review within a 30-minute window. Ideally, your child should practise typing their responses rather than handwriting them.
What Each Component Tests
Understanding the focus helps you choose targeted practice materials
| Feature | Option 1 | Option 2 | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary skill tested | Comprehension & inference | Logical reasoning with numbers | Both require analytical thinking |
| Questions | Reading: 17 (multi-part) | Maths: 35 questions | Maths has more questions in less time |
| Time pressure | Thinking Skills: 1 min/Q | Writing: 30 min for 1 task | TS has highest time pressure per question |
| Preparation approach | Reading widely + practice | Pattern drills + timed practice | All need both skill-building and timed runs |
Types of Practice Papers Available
Not all practice papers are the same. Understanding the different types available helps you make informed choices about where to invest your time and money.
Official Sample Questions
The NSW Department of Education and Cambridge Assessment provide sample questions that reflect the actual test format and difficulty level. These are the gold standard for understanding what the real test looks like. While the number of official samples is limited, they should be the first resource you use — they give you an authentic benchmark against which to measure your child's readiness.
Official samples are particularly valuable for familiarising your child with the computer-based interface and the exact style of questions used. Start here before moving to any other materials.
Commercial Practice Paper Providers
Several publishers produce selective test practice papers and workbooks. The quality varies enormously. Some providers have updated their materials to reflect the current computer-based, four-component format, while others still base their content on older test structures.
When evaluating commercial practice papers, check that they cover all four components (Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing) with the correct number of questions and timing for each. Materials that bundle "general ability" questions from the old format may not align with what your child will actually face.
BrainTree Practice Tests and Resources
At BrainTree Coaching, our selective practice tests are specifically designed to mirror the current NSW selective test format. Each practice test covers all four components with appropriate timing, difficulty progression, and detailed answer explanations that help students learn from their mistakes — not just check whether they got the right answer.
Our free mock tests provide an accessible starting point for families beginning their selective test preparation journey. These give your child a realistic taste of the selective exam practice test experience and help you identify which components need the most attention.
"The difference between practising with any random worksheet and practising with format-accurate materials is enormous. Students who train with the right structure build genuine test-day confidence."
Academic Team
Selective Past Papers and Older Materials
You may encounter selective exam past papers from previous years. While these can be useful for building general skills, be cautious. The test format has changed significantly with the move to computer-based testing and the introduction of the four-component structure with equal weighting. Older papers may include components or question types that no longer appear on the test, or may lack the Writing component entirely.
Use older selective past papers as supplementary skill-building resources, but do not rely on them as your primary preparation tool. Your core selective test practice should be with materials that match the current format.
💡 Choosing the Right Practice Materials
Prioritise practice papers that match the 2026 format: computer-based, four components, correct timing (155 minutes total), and equal 25% weighting. Check that Reading includes multi-part passages, Mathematical Reasoning has 35 questions in 40 minutes, Thinking Skills covers abstract/non-verbal reasoning, and Writing requires a typed response.
How to Use Practice Papers Effectively
Having the right practice papers is only half the equation. How your child uses them determines whether they translate into genuine improvement.
The 5-Step Practice Paper Method
Complete under timed conditions
Set a timer matching the real test timing for each component. Resist the temptation to give extra time — the goal is to build pacing awareness and time management skills that transfer to test day.
Mark and score honestly
Use the answer key to mark responses accurately. Record the score for each component separately so you can track progress by area. For Writing, use a rubric or have an experienced teacher assess the response.
Review every error in detail
This is the most important step. For each incorrect answer, identify why it was wrong. Was it a careless mistake, a knowledge gap, a misunderstood question, or a time-pressure error? The reason determines the fix.
Categorise and target weaknesses
Group errors by type and component. If your child consistently struggles with inference questions in Reading or pattern sequences in Thinking Skills, that tells you exactly where to focus skill-building work between practice tests.
Repeat with fresh papers at intervals
Space practice papers out — one per week or fortnight is far more effective than cramming several in a weekend. Each paper should follow the full cycle: timed attempt, marking, error review, targeted practice, then the next paper.
Creating Realistic Test Conditions
The more closely practice sessions mirror the real test environment, the better your child will perform on the day. This means:
- Timing each component separately with the correct duration (45 min Reading, 40 min Maths, 40 min Thinking Skills, 30 min Writing)
- No breaks between components during full practice runs, simulating the continuous nature of the test
- Using a computer for practice whenever possible, especially for the Writing component
- Removing distractions — no phone, no music, no interruptions
- Sitting at a desk rather than on the couch or bed
Your child does not need to do a full 155-minute practice session every time. Individual component practice under timed conditions is valuable and less exhausting. Reserve full-length practice tests for key milestone points in the preparation timeline.
Tracking Progress Over Time
Keep a simple record of your child's scores on each practice paper, broken down by component. This does not need to be elaborate — a spreadsheet or even a notebook works well. What matters is that you can see trends: Is performance in Mathematical Reasoning improving? Has Reading plateaued? Is Writing consistently the weakest area?
This data guides your preparation decisions. If one component is consistently strong, you can maintain it with lighter practice while redirecting more time to weaker areas. Without tracking, you are guessing.
Practice Paper Session Checklist
- ✓Timer set for the correct duration for each component
- ✓All distractions removed from the practice environment
- ✓Computer available for Writing component practice
- ✓Answer key and marking rubric ready before starting
- ✓Notebook or spreadsheet open to record scores
- ✓Plan for error review session within 24 hours of completing the paper
- ✓Next practice paper scheduled with at least 5-7 days gap
Common Mistakes When Using Practice Papers
Over the years, we have seen the same preparation mistakes repeated across thousands of families. Recognising these patterns helps you avoid them.
Mistake 1: Doing Too Many Papers Without Reviewing Errors
This is the single most common mistake. Some families adopt a "volume approach," working through paper after paper without pausing to understand what went wrong. Your child may complete dozens of practice tests yet continue making the same types of errors because no one took the time to analyse and address the underlying issues.
The fix: One practice paper with thorough error review is worth more than five papers rushed through without reflection. After every practice test, spend at least as much time reviewing mistakes as your child spent completing the paper.
Mistake 2: Not Practising Under Timed Conditions
Practising without a timer gives a false sense of readiness. A child who scores well with unlimited time may struggle significantly when the clock is running. The real selective test is time-pressured — particularly Mathematical Reasoning (35 questions in 40 minutes) and Thinking Skills (40 questions in 40 minutes).
The fix: From the early stages of preparation, introduce timing. It does not need to be strict immediately — you might start with generous time limits and gradually reduce them to match the real test. But untimed practice should be reserved for skill-building exercises, not full practice papers.
Mistake 3: Using Outdated or Incorrect Format Materials
The selective test format has changed, and not all practice materials have kept up. If your child is practising with papers that include "general ability" sections, lack a writing component, or are designed for pen-and-paper delivery, they are building familiarity with the wrong test.
The fix: Verify that every practice paper you use matches the current four-component, computer-based format with correct timing and question counts. When in doubt, compare the structure against official specifications.
Mistake 4: Neglecting the Writing Component
Because Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, and Thinking Skills are all multiple-choice (or similar), they are easier to practise and mark. Writing requires more effort to assess meaningfully, so it often gets less attention. Yet Writing carries the same 25% weighting as every other component.
The fix: Include Writing in every full practice session. Seek feedback from a teacher, tutor, or experienced marker. Our selective school preparation programmes include structured writing feedback to address this common gap.
Mistake 5: Starting Practice Papers Too Late or Too Early
Starting too late means your child misses the opportunity to identify weaknesses and address them. Starting too early — before foundational skills are in place — can lead to frustration and low scores that damage confidence rather than building it.
The fix: Follow the preparation timeline outlined in the next section. Use the early months for skill-building and introduce full practice papers when your child has a solid foundation to build upon.
⚠️ Watch for Practice Paper Burnout
If your child starts dreading practice sessions, resisting preparation, or showing declining motivation, it may be a sign of burnout. Quality always beats quantity. Reduce frequency, mix in different learning activities, and remember that a confident, well-rested child will perform better on test day than an exhausted one who has completed every practice paper available.
When to Start Practice Papers in Your Preparation Timeline
Timing matters. Introducing practice papers at the right point in your child's preparation ensures they build confidence progressively rather than facing demoralising results too early.
Selective Test Preparation Timeline
Foundation Building
Objectives
- Build core reading comprehension skills
- Strengthen mathematical reasoning fundamentals
- Develop regular reading habits across genres
- Begin typing practice if speed is below 25 WPM
Key Activities
- Daily reading of age-appropriate challenging texts
- Mathematical problem-solving worksheets (not full practice papers)
- Vocabulary building through reading and word lists
- Typing practice using online tools 10-15 minutes daily
Skill Development & Introduction to Practice
Objectives
- Introduce component-specific practice questions
- Build familiarity with question types and formats
- Identify initial strengths and weaknesses
- Begin timed single-component practice sessions
Key Activities
- Complete individual component question sets under timed conditions
- First diagnostic practice paper to establish baseline
- Targeted work on identified weak areas
- Regular writing practice with varied prompts and feedback
Intensive Practice Phase
Objectives
- Regular full-length practice papers under exam conditions
- Systematic error analysis and targeted improvement
- Build test-day stamina for the full 155-minute duration
- Refine time management strategies for each component
Key Activities
- One full practice test every 1-2 weeks
- Detailed error review after each practice test
- Focused skill-building work between practice tests
- Writing practice with timed 30-minute sessions
Final Preparation
Objectives
- Consolidate skills and maintain confidence
- Fine-tune time management
- Simulate realistic test-day conditions
- Reduce new material and focus on review
Key Activities
- One full practice test per week under strict exam conditions
- Light review of previously challenging question types
- Relaxation and confidence-building activities
- Logistics planning for test day (location, timing, equipment)
The key principle is progressive intensity. Early preparation focuses on building the underlying skills your child needs. Practice papers are introduced once those skills reach a level where your child can engage meaningfully with test-format questions. Full-length, timed practice tests come later, when your child has developed enough skill and stamina to benefit from the experience.
For a comprehensive look at strategies across the entire preparation journey, see our guide on selective school success strategies for 2026.
If you are starting later than the ideal timeline — for example, with only a few months before the year 6 selective test — focus on diagnostic practice (one or two papers to identify the weakest areas), then spend most of your remaining time on targeted skill development rather than paper after paper. Strategic selective test preparation always outperforms volume-based cramming.
You can also use our selective test calculator to help gauge where your child stands and set realistic goals based on their current performance level.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many practice papers should my child complete before the test?
There is no magic number. Quality matters far more than quantity. A student who completes 10 practice papers with thorough error review and targeted follow-up will typically outperform one who rushes through 30 papers without reflection. As a general guide, aim for one full practice paper every one to two weeks during the intensive preparation phase (3-6 months before the test), with individual component practice sessions in between.
Are past papers from previous years still useful?
Past papers can be useful for building general skills, but they should not be your primary preparation resource. The selective test format has changed significantly with the move to a computer-based, four-component assessment. Older papers may not include the Writing component, may use different question types, or may not reflect the current timing and weighting structure. Use them as supplementary material, not your main practice source.
Should my child practise on a computer or on paper?
Wherever possible, practise on a computer. The real test is computer-based, and students who are familiar with reading passages on screen, selecting answers digitally, and typing their writing responses will have an advantage over those who have only practised on paper. This is especially important for the Writing component, where typing speed directly affects how much content your child can produce in 30 minutes.
What if my child's scores are not improving despite doing practice papers?
Stagnant scores usually indicate one of three issues: the student is not reviewing errors meaningfully, there is an underlying skill gap that practice papers alone cannot address, or the student is experiencing burnout. Step back and examine your approach. Ensure error review is happening after every paper. Consider whether targeted skill-building work (focused reading comprehension exercises, mathematical reasoning drills, or writing workshops) might be more productive than additional practice papers. If needed, professional guidance from a tutor or coaching programme can help identify and address specific barriers.
How do I know if a practice paper is good quality?
A good practice paper matches the current test format (four components, correct timing, appropriate difficulty level), provides clear and detailed answer explanations (not just answer keys), and is produced by a reputable provider with experience in selective test preparation. Check that the Reading component uses multi-part passages, Mathematical Reasoning has 35 questions for 40 minutes, Thinking Skills focuses on abstract and non-verbal reasoning, and the Writing component requires a typed response to a single extended task.
Is it worth doing practice papers for all four components, or should we focus on weak areas?
Both. Your child should regularly practise all four components to maintain skills and build test-day stamina. However, the balance of preparation time should tilt towards weaker areas. If your child consistently scores well in Thinking Skills but struggles with Writing, they might do Thinking Skills practice once a week while doing Writing practice three times a week. The equal 25% weighting of each component means improvement in a weak area has the same impact as improvement in a strong one — and weak areas typically offer more room for growth.
Where can I find selective past papers that match the current test format?
The best source of format-accurate selective past papers is the NSW Department of Education website, which provides official sample questions from Cambridge Assessment. Beyond that, reputable coaching providers like BrainTree offer selective practice tests online that mirror the current four-component, computer-based structure. Avoid purchasing workbooks that still reference the old "general ability" format. When evaluating any provider, check that their materials include the correct number of questions, timing, and component structure — and ideally, that they offer practice in a digital format rather than paper only.
How do selective exam past papers differ from the current test format?
Selective exam past papers from before 2018 used a different test structure that included General Ability instead of Thinking Skills, was administered on paper rather than computer, and had different timing and question distributions. While older papers can still help build general reasoning and reading skills, they should not be your primary preparation resource. The current test format features four equally weighted components (Reading, Mathematical Reasoning, Thinking Skills, and Writing) completed digitally over 155 minutes. Always prioritise materials aligned to this current structure.
Can selective test sample questions help identify my child's weaknesses?
Yes — selective test sample questions are one of the most effective diagnostic tools available. Have your child complete a set of official or high-quality sample questions for each component under timed conditions, then analyse the results by question type. For example, within Reading, identify whether errors cluster around inference questions, vocabulary-in-context, or synthesis tasks. Within Mathematical Reasoning, note whether your child struggles more with number problems, geometry, or pattern-based reasoning. This question-level analysis is far more actionable than an overall score alone.
What is the best way to access selective practice tests online?
The most effective selective practice tests online replicate the computer-based test experience, allowing your child to practise answering questions on screen, typing writing responses, and managing time with a digital timer. BrainTree's selective practice tests are designed specifically for this purpose, with detailed answer explanations and progress tracking. You can also start with our free mock tests to establish a baseline before committing to a full preparation programme.
For a deeper dive into what each component involves, read our complete guide to NSW selective school test components for 2026.
Our practice tests mirror the 2026 format with detailed explanations, progress tracking, and expert support to help your child perform at their best.
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Resources to Support Your Preparation
Resources to Support Your Preparation
Explore these carefully selected resources to build a comprehensive practice strategy.
Selective Practice Tests
Format-accurate practice tests covering all four components with detailed answer explanations and progress tracking.
Access ResourceFree Mock Tests
Access free diagnostic mock tests to establish your child's baseline and identify areas for focused improvement.
Access ResourceSelective School Preparation
Comprehensive preparation programme covering skills development, practice, and exam strategies for the NSW selective test.
Access ResourceSelective Test Calculator
Estimate your child's competitive position and set realistic targets based on current practice test performance.
Access ResourceTest Components Complete Guide
Deep dive into all four selective test components — what they assess, how they're scored, and targeted preparation strategies.
Access ResourceSuccess Strategies 2026
Proven preparation strategies from families who have successfully navigated the selective school placement process.
Access ResourceRelated Guides
Last updated: 6 February 2026

