The 11+ varies significantly by region — format, subjects tested, and exam dates all differ. Find your area below to understand exactly what your child needs to prepare for.
The Kent Test is one of the largest grammar systems in England. All 32 grammar schools use the same GL Assessment paper.
Fully selective county. TBGS (The Bucks Grammar Schools) consortium — one test applies to all 13 schools.
South West Herts consortium covers Dame Alice Owen's, Watford and Rickmansworth schools.
CSSE (Consortium of Selective Schools in Essex) — one test for Colchester and Southend schools.
Medway sets its own papers — not GL or CEM. Practice both GL-style and school-specific formats.
Slough consortium — Herschel Grammar and Burnham Grammar.
Selective Eligibility Test — one test applies to Wilson's, Wallington, Nonsuch, Sutton High and others.
CEM format — mixed papers, fast-paced. Covers Beths Grammar, Bexley Grammar and Townley.
Queen Elizabeth's Boys sets its own highly competitive entrance exam.
Ilford County High and Woodford County High — GL Assessment papers.
Graveney School — selective places via the Wandsworth test.
West Midlands consortium covers King Edward VI schools in Birmingham and Warwickshire grammar schools.
LCGS (Lincolnshire) consortium — GL Assessment used across all schools.
CEM format. Covers Pate's Grammar, Cheltenham and Sir Thomas Rich's.
Various independent school arrangements — most use GL Assessment.
Trafford consortium — covers Altrincham, Sale, Urmston and Stretford grammar schools.
Wirral consortium — Calday Grange, West Kirby, Wirral Grammar.
Various arrangements — some schools use GL, others set their own. Always check individual school requirements.
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