11+ Exam Practice Mock Test 6
Mock test 6 — 24 questions.
About this mock
Difficulty: BeginnerEleven Plus Mock 6 gives candidates a direct check on sentence sense in learning support scenarios. The page treats sentence sense as a decision task, with grammar clues, word fit and context reading used where they matter. The final check is confidence with tense awareness. During Eleven Plus Mock 6, treat sentence sense as the key checkpoint.
Topics included
- Sentence sense
- Grammar clues
- Word fit
- Context reading
- Tense awareness
Common mistakes in this mock
- Misreading the question about sentence completion and grammar clues
- Choosing an answer before checking all details
- Confusing sentence sense with grammar clues
- Missing wording that changes the answer
Who this mock is for
Revisers who missed questions around sentence sense and want a focused checkpoint.
How to practise
How to use Practice mode
Practice mode shows the correct answer and an explanation after every question, with no timer. Use it the first time you sit a topic, when you want to learn as you go, or when you're targeting a specific weak area.
How to use Exam mode
Exam mode gives timed practice for revision. Official timings vary by exam provider and skill, so always check the official test format before booking.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the 11+ pass mark?
- There is no fixed national pass mark. Each grammar school sets a standardised threshold each year — typically around 121 on a scaled score, but it varies by region.
- GL or CEM style?
- Different regions use different boards. Our mocks include both styles so your child gets balanced practice. Check with your target school which format they use.
- How long should we revise for?
- Most families start structured 11+ prep 12–18 months before the test. The closer to the date, the more value full timed mocks add.
- Is the real test on paper or computer?
- Most grammar schools still use paper tests; some independent schools have moved to computer-based assessment. Practising on screen is still useful — comprehension is the same skill either way.
