Of course we all wish we knew the answer to this question! The sats test for Year 2 and Year 6 will look quite different. KS1 SATs consists of a total of 6 papers altogether, usually not sat under timed conditions. They are also marked internally by the school.
KS2 SATs consist of 6 papers too but to be sat within time restrictions. In addition there is a teacher assessed element in KS2 to establish a ‘Writing’ score. These papers are sent back to be marked centrally with marks standardised around a score of 100.
Year 2 National Tests: KS1 SATs Papers 2023
6 and 7 year olds in Year 2 will sit the following SATs Papers in May 2023.
The KS1 Maths SATs:
- There will be 2 papers.
- Paper 1 is a 25 mark arithmetic test which should take around 15 minutes.
- Paper 2 involves reasoning, problem solving and mathematical fluency. This paper has 35 marks available, will last for roughly 35 minutes, and contains a variety of question types.
The KS1 SPaG SATs:
- There will be 2 papers
- Paper 1 is a 20 word spelling paper, comprising of 20 marks. The spelling test should take around 15 minutes.
- Paper 2 consists of a reading booklet containing different passages of text. This will average out at roughly 900 words.
The KS1 Reading SATs:
- There will be 2 papers.
- Paper 1 consist of a variety of texts totalling between 400-700 words. There will be a number of questions for pupils to answer dotted throughout.
- Paper 2 consists of a reading booklet containing different passages of text. This will average out at roughly 900 words.
Year 6 National Tests: KS2 SATs Papers 2023
10 and 11 year olds in Year 6 will sit the following KS2 SATs Papers in 2023. In addition some schools will be chosen for science sampling and will also sit a KS2 Science Paper
The KS2 Reading SATs:
- This is one paper, with questions that are based on 3 different passages of text. Pupils will have 1 hour to complete the paper.
The KS2 SPaG SATs:
- There is a 20 word aural spelling test which should last around 15 minutes.
- There is also a written element which consists of an English grammar and punctuation paper, which will last for 45 minutes.
The KS2 Maths SATs:
- There will be 3 mathematics papers.
- Paper 1 is an arithmetic paper which will last for 30 minutes.
- Papers 2 and 3 are reasoning papers which will last for 40 minutes each.
- Talk about the SATs and tell them not worry about them. The school will also do this, too, but it makes a bigger impact if school and parents do this together. Children perform best when they are relaxed.
- Reading is a key part of primary education so keep encouraging daily reading whether your child reads on their own or if you read together. Discuss the books, the characters, the storylines and encourage your child to express their own opinions on the book. This is important to their long term development as well as SATs test.
- Play mental games when you are on the way home whether you are walking or driving. Playing card games, Uno, Monopoly and dominoes all help with Maths. Whereas games like hangman, Boggle or Scrabble will support with literacy,
- You can buy test papers and work through them with your child but your child will be doing lots of tests in school so only do more if your child enjoys their challenge. If your child doesn’t like them, it is counter productive to force them to do more.
- There are lots of revision guides available to buy. You do not have to get one but if your child is reassured by having a book why not choose one together.
- Try to keep everything else running normally. So whether its sport, music lessons or Scouts and Guides; sticking to your normal routine of out of school activities demonstrates to your child that SATs are not the be and end all of year 6.
- During the SATs week, whilst keeping to normal timetable, try to avoid late nights, as children will find sitting the tests tiring.
- Try to make sure your child has some fresh air when they come home from school on test days.
- Keep it in proportion. They are primary-school tests to gauge the education in the school and do not affect the secondary school your child will go to.
- Stay positive. Many children enjoy taking the tests as they see it as a challenge and like the importance and the feeling of being special that SATs give year 6.