Magdalen College School 11+ Test
Magdalen College School 11+ Test
Magdalen College School 11+ Test
With all our examinations, we are keen to look for potential, not simply
current attainment. For this reason we are always interested in the
school reference, the wider interests of the boy, and any other
applicable information; our own papers and interviews are designed
with the intention of exploring the way in which each child thinks,
helping us to assess his promise in this way, too. No special preparation
is expected or required for the tests.
As a result of the tests, interviews, and school report, offers of places
are made in February to successful candidates and a deposit (currently
500) is requested. This reserves a provisional place at Magdalen
College School.
Scholarships, All-rounder scholarships and Governors Presentation
Awards are awarded by the Master for excellence in one or more
academic or extra-curricular areas based on the tests, interviews and
school report.
Or:
Write a short article for your school magazine in which you advise other pupils on the best
ways of keeping on top of homework.
Or:
Your teacher has asked you to give a short speech to the rest of your class on the importance
of healthy eating. Write out your speech and think carefully about the ways in which you
will engage your audience.
FIRST NAME........SURNAME
CURRENT SCHOOL
Mark
1.
Work out
a)
25 + 32
Answer: [1]
b)
84 - 21
Answer: [1]
c)
119 + 385
Answer: [1]
d)
204 - 96
Answer: [1]
e)
83 17 + 26
Answer: [1]
f)
3.2 + 0.9
Answer: [1]
g)
4.77 0.45
Answer: [1]
2.
a)
Answer:..sides. [2]
b)
Phil says I am looking at a picture that is made from pentagons and heptagons, where
none of the sides overlap. I count 38 sides in total.
Answer:pentagonsheptagons [3]
3.
Work out
a)
98
Answer: [1]
b)
123 3
Answer: [1]
c)
11 23
Answer: [1]
d)
112 4
Answer: [1]
e)
196 14
Answer: [1]
3.
and
52 101
Answer: [1]
b)
117 101
Answer: [1]
c)
12 102
Answer: [2]
4.
a)
A bus from Oxford to Reading costs 12.30 and a bus from Reading to London
costs 32 exactly.
If I have a 50 note in my wallet, and wish to travel by bus from Oxford to London via
Reading, how much money will I have at the end of the journey?
Answer: [3]
b)
Another bus journey is much shorter, and only costs 88 pence. What is the
smallest number of coins that can pass between the passenger and the bus driver in order
to pay the fare? Remember that the bus driver can give the passenger change.
Answer: [2]
5.
a)
12cm
C
D
30mm
A
Answer:cm2 [1]
b)
The rectangle is now cut from A to C in a straight line, and one of two the pieces
thrown away. What is the area of the remaining piece?
Answer:cm2 [1]
c)
Suppose the rectangle was cut differently, this time along the dotted lines as
shown below. The shaded shape is kept, and the other bits are discarded. What is
the area of the shaded shape?
12cm
30mm
A
Answer:cm2 [1]
6.
a)
b)
[3]
7.
Draw a line which passes through the circle and is NOT a line of symmetry.
[1]
8.
It can be rotated to make three of the four shapes below; which is the odd one out?
Shape A
Shape B
Shape C
Shape D
9.
For each diagram, write down the fraction of the shape that is shaded.
a)
b)
Answer: [1]
Answer: [1]
c)
Answer: [1]
d)
Answer: [1]
10.
a)
b)
Answer: [1]
c)
If
1
4
= 0.2 , write as a decimal.
5
5
Answer: [1]
d)
1
1
1
is half of . Write
as a decimal.
10
5
10
Answer: [1]
11.
Mark and Sue are sharing a pack of Cadburys celebrations. There are 36 individual
sweets in the pack.
a)
Mark divides up the sweets so that he gets three times as many as Sue.
How many sweets does Sue get?
Answer:sweets [3]
b)
Sue complains about the above arrangement. She suggests that they should take
sweets out of the pile of 36 in a sequence.
Sue takes out one sweet.
Then Mark takes out two sweets.
The Sue takes out three sweets and so on until the pile is gone.
How many sweets does Sue get now?
Answer: [3]
12. Describe each of these sequences by a rule. Then write the next two terms in the
sequence.
1, 3, 5, 7, 9, .
a)
[2]
[1]
1, 2, 4, 8, 16, .
b)
[2]
[1]
3, 5, 8, 12, 17,
c)
d)
[2]
[1]
[2]
[1]
13. a)
2 3 4 5 6
, , , ,
,
5 7 9 11 13
b)
Answer: [2]
DIAGRAMS ARE
NOT TO SCALE!
a
120o
Answer: a = [1]
80o
c
b
50o
30
Answer: b = [1]
Answer :c = [1]
12 40 = 480 .
_____ 40 = 960
12 _____ = 48
_____ = 480 40
[3]
16. Insert some or all of the symbols -, +, , into the boxes below to make the calculations
correct.
a)
8 = 48
a)
6 = 22
b)
4=4
c)
3 = 14
17.
[6]
[4]
18.
Place one of each of the numbers 1,2,3,4,5 into a circle in the V-shaped diagram so that
the total of each arm is the same.
[2]
19.
A man decides to pave a path around the edge his rectangular garden. The garden
measures 4 metres by 200 cm, as shown below. The paving tiles that he will use measure
40cm by 40cm as shown. The path will go all the way round the garden, shown by the
dotted line. Be careful the diagram is NOT TO SCALE.
200cm
40cm
40cm
GARDEN
4m
PAVING TILE
Each tile costs 3.50. How much will it cost the gardener to lay his path?
Answer: [5]
20.
The net of a cube is a shape that can be folded up to make a cube. A simple example is
given.
[2]
20. 12 boy scouts will eat 30 loaves in 4 days.
a)
b)
Answer:days [2]
c)
Answer:loaves [2]
21.
a)
x+y+z
Answer: [2]
b)
2x + 2y
Answer: [2]
ii)
Which is bigger,
x+ z
x
or ?
y
z
Answer: [3]
22. Place one of each of the numbers 1,2,3,4,5,7 in a region of the diagram below so that the
total in each of the circles is the same. The number 6 is correctly placed as a hint.
Answer: [6]
END OF TEST GO BACK AND CHECK YOUR WORKING