Free 11 Plus (11+) Practice Papers and Answers | Gravesend Grammar School Guide

Our Practice Papers and Answers

KENT ENGLISH AND MATHEMATICS PAPER 1

Test Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

The papers we’ve shared above are in a similar style to the Kent Test papers and those typically delivered as 11 Plus assessments by Gravesend Grammar School.

New 11+ practice papers are sent out via email every Friday. You can sign up to receive these, every week, using the form at the top of the page.

Other Sample Papers and Answers

English Paper 1

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

English Paper 2

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

English Paper 3

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Maths Paper 1

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Maths Paper 2

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Maths Paper 3

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Verbal Reasoning Paper 1

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Verbal Reasoning Paper 2

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Verbal Reasoning Paper 3

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Non-Verbal Reasoning Paper 1

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Non-Verbal Reasoning Paper 2

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

Non-Verbal Reasoning Paper 3

Exam Paper

Answering Booklet

Answers

The papers we’ve shared above are in a similar style to those typically delivered as 11 Plus assessments by Gravesend Grammar School.

About the School

 

Address — Gravesend Grammar School, Church Walk, Gravesend, Kent, DA12 2PR

Type of school — Boys’ grammar school

Headteacher — Mr Malcolm Moaby

Cost — Free

Pupils in school — 1234

Places available in year 7 —  150

Average applicants per place — 3 or more.

Catchment area —  Gravesend Grammar School does have a catchment area which is based on distance from the school. Priority is given to:

  • Children living within the Borough of Gravesham. (Criterion 5)

  • Children who live within the civil parishes of Ash-cum-Ridley, Bean, Fawkham, Hartley, Longfield and New Barn, Southfleet, Swanscombe and Greenhithe and Stansted.(Criterion 6)

  • Children who live within the civil parishes of Stone, Darenth, Horton Kirby and South Darenth, Cliffe and Cliffe Wood. (Criterion 7)

Gravesend Grammar School Catchment Area

Oversubscription policy — Before the application of oversubscription criteria, students with an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) which names the school and who have passed the assessment will be admitted. As a result of this the published admissions number will be reduced accordingly.

Where qualifying applications for admission exceed the number of places available, places will be allocated in the following order of priority:

  1.  Children who are in Local Authority Care.

  2. Children whose mental or physical impairment means they have a demonstrable and significant need to attend a particular school.

  3. Children who have a brother (or sister in the 6th Form) who will be attending the school when the applicant joins.

  4. Children who have a parent who is a member of staff

  5. Children who live within the Borough of Gravesham.

  6. Children who live within the civil parishes of Ash-cum-Ridley, Bean, Fawkham, Hartley, Longfield and New Barn, Southfleet, Swanscombe and Greenhithe and Stansted.

  7. Children who live within the civil parishes of Stone, Darenth, Horton Kirby and South Darenth, Cliffe and Cliffe Woods.

  8. All other Eligible Children. 

Within each criterion, children in receipt of Pupil Premium will be ranked highest. Where there is more than one, priority will be determined by the distance of the child’s home to the school.

School Summary

Gravesend Grammar School was established in 1892 and is an all-boys grammar school for boys in Gravesend, Kent. Girls are admitted into the sixth form. The school specialises in languages, maths and computing, It became an academy in 2011. 

Gravesend is also a Leadership School for the National College of School Leadership. 

Ofsted rated this school as ‘outstanding’ in 2015. Find their reports here.

Compare this school’s performance with other local schools here.

Exam Information

Exam style —GL Assessment/The Kent Test

Exam topic:

  • Reasoning

    • Verbal, non-verbal and spatial

  • English and maths

  • Creative writing

Exam length — 2 x 1 hour exams + a 40-minute writing exercise.

Pass rate — In 2017, 15,253 applicants took the Kent test; only 6,537 passed.

Other exam information:

  • The reasoning, English and maths tests are multiple-choice with a separate answer sheet.

  • The first test will be an English and Maths paper. Each section will include a 5 minute practice exercise followed by a 25 minute test. The English section will involve a comprehension exercise as well as some additional questions drawn from a set designed to test literacy skills.

  • The second test will be the reasoning paper. It will take about 1 hour, including the practice sections and questions. It will contain a verbal reasoning section and a non-verbal reasoning section of roughly the same length. The non-verbal reasoning will be split into short sections, administered and timed individually.

  • Finally, there will also be a writing exercise which will not be marked but may be used by a local headteacher panel as part of the headteacher assessment stage of the process. 40 minutes will be allowed for the writing task, including 10 minutes planning time.

Scores:

  • Your child will get three standardised scores (one for English, one for maths and one for reasoning) and a total (aggregate) score.

  • Standardisation is a statistical process which compares your child's performance with the average performance of other children in each test. A slight adjustment is made to take account of each child's age so that the youngest are not at a disadvantage.

Pass mark:

To qualify, children needed a total score of 332 or more, with no single score lower than 108. Test scores range from 69 to 141. The highest possible total score is 423.

If your child did not reach this threshold score and their primary school referred their case to the local Head Teacher Assessment Panel, the panel will have looked at their achievement in school and examples of their work, including the writing task completed on the day, before a final decision was made.

Please note that a score of over 332 does NOT mean your child is guaranteed a place at your chosen school.

Have a listen to our 11 Plus Vocabulary Podcast and expand your child’s vocabulary one word at a time.