Key Stage 2 SATs are the first major assessment most children face, and for Stevenage families they carry real weight. SATs results influence secondary school setting, and in some areas they affect school placement. Our teaching team prepare Year 5 and Year 6 students for all four papers — arithmetic, mathematical reasoning (Papers 2 and 3), reading, and grammar, punctuation and spelling — building confidence alongside capability.
The Arithmetic Test
The arithmetic paper tests calculation skills: long multiplication, long division, fractions, decimals, and percentages. There's no room for reasoning here — it's about speed and accuracy. Our teaching team in Stevenage build these skills through regular practice, focusing on the methods children are expected to use and the common errors that cost marks. Fluent arithmetic is also the foundation for the two reasoning papers, so time spent here pays off twice.
Support for Your Child
SATs preparation works best when it's calm, structured, and focused on real gaps. Give us a call to find the right tutor for your young learner in Stevenage.
When to Start
Starting in Year 5 gives the most time to fill gaps — particularly in maths, where foundational weaknesses can be hard to fix quickly. Year 6 preparation then focuses on applying those skills under test conditions. For Stevenage families who come to us in Year 6, we can still make a significant difference by targeting the topics most likely to appear and building exam readiness rapidly. But earlier is always better, especially for children who find reading or maths genuinely difficult.
The Tutoring Advantage
There is strong evidence that personal instruction is the most effective form of teaching — and in Stevenage, families see this in practice. A dedicated tutor adapts explanations until they click, sets the right level of challenge, and notices immediately when understanding starts to slip. This responsive approach is simply not possible in a class of 25-30, which is why targeted tutoring often achieves in weeks what months of classroom teaching cannot.
The Reading Paper
The reading paper presents three texts of increasing difficulty and asks questions that test retrieval, inference, vocabulary, and summary. Many Stevenage children find the final text challenging — it's often a pre-1900 extract or a piece of non-fiction with unfamiliar language. Our teaching team prepare students by practising with real SATs papers and teaching strategies for each question type: how to find evidence, how to explain an author's word choice, how to summarise a paragraph concisely.