Habs Boys NVR questions
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Habs Boys NVR questions
My son is sitting the Habs exam in January. Can anyone give me an idea of the difficulty level of the NVR questions? He has just done a GL NVR test and found it quite challenging so I am hoping the level will be a bit easier! Thanks in advance.
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Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
Don't know about the habs exam,but with NVR you need to familiarise with the types of questions,find a method and practice until you can do the questions quickly.
"To err is human;to forgive ,divine"
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Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
75 questions in the reasoning paper, and 30 mins allowed to finish. Not difficult but more to do with the timing. Boys need to be very quick thinking, don't dwell and keep moving to get them done within. The big trick is actually on the English paper, where it has a section of 10 general knowledge questions, you either get them or your don't. Need to be well read.
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Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
You will be competing against some ds who will have done a lot of NVR for Latymer CEM so I would recommend that you do some timed CEM NVR papers. You can get better very quickly. DG
Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
So is the reasoning paper all NVR or VR too? Also the English general knowledge is that something likr current affairs or something else? I thought this section was grammar. Clearly mistaken.
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Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
Mixed of VR and NVR. English paper last year has a section of https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anagram" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
VR and NVR are the best tests for innate intelligence by some measure.
The beauty of NVR is familiarization is relatively quick and accessible to all without much prior knowledge and is the Gold Standard Test that separates the girls from the women!
Formal English or Maths is mostly dependent on culture,class and prior education.
All 11+ tests should be based on VR and NVR imo and nothing else.
The beauty of NVR is familiarization is relatively quick and accessible to all without much prior knowledge and is the Gold Standard Test that separates the girls from the women!
Formal English or Maths is mostly dependent on culture,class and prior education.
All 11+ tests should be based on VR and NVR imo and nothing else.
Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
I couldn't agree more, especially with regards to any creative writing in English tests. The key for acing these seems to be to know the marking scheme, which most children won't know but those with the right tutors will.Catseye wrote:Formal English or Maths is mostly dependent on culture,class and prior education.
All 11+ tests should be based on VR and NVR imo and nothing else.
Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
Surely it depends on the type of pupils that the school is looking to recruit?Catseye wrote:VR and NVR are the best tests for innate intelligence by some measure.
The beauty of NVR is familiarization is relatively quick and accessible to all without much prior knowledge and is the Gold Standard Test that separates the girls from the women!
Formal English or Maths is mostly dependent on culture,class and prior education.
All 11+ tests should be based on VR and NVR imo and nothing else.
I agree that if they're purely looking for the pupils with the highest innate intelligence then an NVR test would be best.
Why should we assume this though? There is no GCSE in NVR. Perhaps selective schools are looking for pupils who have the greatest potential to do well in formal English, Maths and other subjects which use these as a basis. In which case testing in English and maths would seem to make sense wouldn't it?
Re: Habs Boys NVR questions
Hum......lets look at the logical of;
If both statements are true then why does it necessarily follow that those children with the highest reasoning skills should not also have the greatest potential for GCSE subjects or getting Nobel Prizes? So who is making assumptions now?
Don't worry I have finally got it. The penny has dropped, 11+ is for prep children or privately tutored children or the children of the highly aspirational DIY parents.
Nowt to do with intelligence! Thats the only logical and self-consistent conclusion one could come to -using just your own logic.
versusProud_Dad wrote:Why should we assume this though? There is no GCSE in NVR. Perhaps selective schools are looking for pupils who have the greatest potential to do well in formal English, Maths and other subjects which use these as a basis.
Can you spot a contradiction?Proud_Dad wrote:I agree that if they're purely looking for the pupils with the highest innate intelligence then an NVR test would be best.
If both statements are true then why does it necessarily follow that those children with the highest reasoning skills should not also have the greatest potential for GCSE subjects or getting Nobel Prizes? So who is making assumptions now?
Don't worry I have finally got it. The penny has dropped, 11+ is for prep children or privately tutored children or the children of the highly aspirational DIY parents.
Nowt to do with intelligence! Thats the only logical and self-consistent conclusion one could come to -using just your own logic.