question on the verbal reasoning paper
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question on the verbal reasoning paper
can i just check during the exam you are allowed to write on the exam paper i.e where the questions are (i appreciate you cant on the actual answer sheet)
the reason i ask this is my boy was doing a tutors one last night and on the front it said do any working out on a spare piece of paper.
i had been encouraging him to write some stuff down rather than trying to keep it all in his head especially on the trickier type of questions
the reason i ask this is my boy was doing a tutors one last night and on the front it said do any working out on a spare piece of paper.
i had been encouraging him to write some stuff down rather than trying to keep it all in his head especially on the trickier type of questions
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Hi cd,
As it says on the tin, this is my first experience of the 11+ so take what I say with as much salt as you want.
The CSSE pack of papers included a VR practice test (not an actual past paper) which said rough working could be done on a separate sheet of paper. That said, some of the questions themselves are begging to be written on - why else provide the alphabet for the code questions? My take on it is that it's probably acceptable to write on the question paper and that a separate sheet of paper is provided as an option. I would think that the answer sheet should only contain answers.
The CSSE letter advised bringing a pencil, pen, eraser and ruler. No mention of paper so I expect that will be provided.
I'm sure someone who has been through the process and actually knows the answer will be along shortly. It's a really helpful site .
As it says on the tin, this is my first experience of the 11+ so take what I say with as much salt as you want.
The CSSE pack of papers included a VR practice test (not an actual past paper) which said rough working could be done on a separate sheet of paper. That said, some of the questions themselves are begging to be written on - why else provide the alphabet for the code questions? My take on it is that it's probably acceptable to write on the question paper and that a separate sheet of paper is provided as an option. I would think that the answer sheet should only contain answers.
The CSSE letter advised bringing a pencil, pen, eraser and ruler. No mention of paper so I expect that will be provided.
I'm sure someone who has been through the process and actually knows the answer will be along shortly. It's a really helpful site .
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Re: question on the verbal reasoning paper
My son did the exam 2 years ago. He did ask the teacher at KEGS whether he was allowed to do the rough work on the question paper. He was told that he should do it on the plain paper which would be provided during the exam.chelmsford dad wrote:can i just check during the exam you are allowed to write on the exam paper i.e where the questions are (i appreciate you cant on the actual answer sheet)
the reason i ask this is my boy was doing a tutors one last night and on the front it said do any working out on a spare piece of paper.
i had been encouraging him to write some stuff down rather than trying to keep it all in his head especially on the trickier type of questions
It can be a bit tricky when you do the code questions. However, my son did practise on the plain paper during the prep at home because we were not sure what happened during the exam. I advised him to put the edge of the plain paper on top of the code questions to do the rough work but made sure to line up correctly in the first place. I hope it makes sense.
Hope this helps.
GOOD LUCK and hope everything goes well.
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thanks for that
im sure he probably wouldnt get disqualified or anything the stress is doing funny things to me at the moment
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Re: thanks for that
Breathe slowly and RELAX!!!! Only 8 days to go!!!chelmsford dad wrote:im sure he probably wouldnt get disqualified or anything the stress is doing funny things to me at the moment
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Thanks for the tip. DS is a funny wee soul - he strips off when doing practice papers . I go into the dining room to tell him his time is up, only to find his socks, shoes and jumper strewn all over the place. Hopefully his biggest challenge on the day will be to remain fully clothed . Wonder what he does at school...
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First-timer wrote:Thanks for the tip. DS is a funny wee soul - he strips off when doing practice papers . I go into the dining room to tell him his time is up, only to find his socks, shoes and jumper strewn all over the place. Hopefully his biggest challenge on the day will be to remain fully clothed . Wonder what he does at school...
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Hopefully his biggest challenge on the day will be to remain fully clothed
Thanks for the laugh, just what I need at this moment in time. I was going to ask the question above about the paper but it seems to have been answered for me. Thanks. And great tip about the fleece. I never thought of that. Im getting stressed now.........
Thanks for the laugh, just what I need at this moment in time. I was going to ask the question above about the paper but it seems to have been answered for me. Thanks. And great tip about the fleece. I never thought of that. Im getting stressed now.........