When parents first hear about the 11+ exam, the message often sounds urgent.
Start early. Don’t fall behind. Everyone else is already preparing.
I heard all of that too.
But I didn’t begin with a perfect academic plan.
I started because I didn’t want Year 5 preparation to feel like a sudden shock to my child.
Even with my background in 11+ education, I don’t have all the answers.
I’m still just a mum — trying to work out what is right for my own children.
I Don’t Believe in Pushing Too Early
I don’t believe every child must start formal tutoring in Year 3 or Year 4.
And I don’t believe in heavy exam practice too soon.
What I wanted was simpler:
- not to create a “perfect exam child,”
- but to raise a calm, confident learner.
My real goal wasn’t the exam itself.
It was to help my son:
- sit with a worksheet without panic,
- make thinking time feel normal,
- and avoid the pressure so many families face when 11+ revision suddenly begins in Year 5.
So We Started Small
One short page.
Just 10–15 minutes a day.
A few times a week.
No cramming.
No shouting.
No battles over homework.
And something slowly changed.
What I’ve Learned So Far
11+ preparation isn’t only about getting answers right.
It’s about:
- learning to read questions carefully,
- not freezing when something looks unfamiliar,
- understanding that effort matters more than speed.
These are life skills — not just exam skills.
So Should You Start in Year 3?
My honest answer is this:
You don’t need to start 11+ training.
But you can start 11+ habits.
Small routines.
Gentle thinking.
A little bit of independence.
That is enough for now.
Today’s Takeaway
11+ success doesn’t begin with pressure.
It begins with confidence — one small page at a time.
Next post:
How to build a 10-minute study habit without battles at home.
