OC vs Selective: which test is right for your child?
Both open doors to academically focused schooling in NSW, but they happen at different stages and test slightly different things. Here's a clear comparison so you can decide which one — or both — makes sense for your child.
The quick comparison
| OC test | Selective test | |
|---|---|---|
| Entry point | Year 5 (opportunity class) | Year 7 (selective high school) |
| Sat in | Year 4 | Year 6 |
| Sections | Reading, Maths Reasoning, Thinking Skills | Reading, Maths Reasoning, Thinking Skills, Writing |
| Format | Computer-based | Computer-based |
| Placement | Competitive, scaled score | Competitive, scaled score |
The key differences that matter
Timing and stage
The OC test happens two years earlier. For some children, Year 4 is the right time to stretch; for others, the extra maturity by Year 6 makes the selective test the better fit. Neither is "better" — it depends on your child.
The writing section
The biggest content difference: the selective test includes a writing task, the OC test does not. If you're aiming for selective entry, writing becomes a skill to build over time — which is why starting early helps.
What they share
Reading, mathematical reasoning and thinking skills appear in both, in the same on-screen, timed format. That overlap is the strategic key: preparation isn't wasted.
Can my child do both?
Yes. Because they occur at different year levels, a child can sit the OC test in Year 4 and the selective test in Year 6. Sitting the OC test doesn't affect selective eligibility. Many families treat OC as an early opportunity and a foundation for the later selective test — the shared skills mean the work compounds.
How to choose
- Consider your child's stage. Are they ready to stretch in Year 4, or better suited to Year 6?
- Run a diagnostic now. A timed practice test shows where they sit today — see is my child ready?
- Think long-term. Even if you skip OC, early practice builds the foundation for the selective test.
- Don't over-pressure. These are opportunities, not verdicts — a child who enjoys the challenge does best.
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Is the OC test easier than the selective test?
They're pitched at different ages, so "easier" isn't quite the right frame. Both are competitive; the selective test adds writing and is sat by older children.
Does doing OC help with selective later?
The reading, maths-reasoning and thinking-skills work carries over directly — a strong foundation for the Year 7 test.
Can we prepare for both at once?
Largely yes for the shared subjects. Add dedicated writing practice when aiming for the selective test.