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    PSLE Discussions and Strategies

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Primary 6 & PSLE
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    • thebottomsupblogT Offline
      thebottomsupblog @JensonTan
      last edited by thebottomsupblog

      @JensonTan Some of the things that I did/still do:

      • After my son did each test paper, I sometimes checked what he got wrong and categorised the mistakes into “careless” vs “don’t know,” which we would highlight. For the latter, I would get his tutor to explain, or we would find a YouTube vid, etc. Around once in two weeks, I would reprint questions that he got wrong and ask him to redo (more than once if necessary).

      • For English compo, I believe in sticking to a few practice topics and doing multiple drafts, rather than doing compo after compo. For my daughter, I made her rewrite the same story 5-6 times. Her grammar/spelling etc was strong, so we focused on: removing unnecessary plot details (like waking up, getting hairbrush, brushing teeth), avoiding cliches (“golden rays of sunshine”), and having an ending with some depth, like a lesson learned.

      • For oral/current affairs/vocab, I try to use “bigger” words at the dinner table, or I will use my WhatsApp stories to introduce vocab words and share links with my kids (mostly NYT, because I prefer the writing there). For local writing, I like Jom. I don’t really signpost my stories as “Hey this is a new word that you should use,” but I’ll use it naturally and they can check it themselves or ask me.

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      • ish_00I Offline
        ish_00 @JensonTan
        last edited by

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        • ish_00I Offline
          ish_00 @JensonTan
          last edited by

          @JensonTan and @singingforzara , there are now digital versions of top school papers. I came across mcq.sg, which does this and lets you see where our child is weaker, which topics, etc. It also automatically prompts more questions on the weaker topics.

          I found it really helpful for focusing on the right areas instead of blinding doing paper after paper.

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          • ahyouA Offline
            ahyou @singingforzara
            last edited by

            Hi @singingforzara ,
            Hi! My daughter is also P6 this year. We do buy past year prelim papers — they’re great for exposure to different question styles since each school sets slightly different papers.

            What worked for us:

            • Top school prelim papers (Nanyang, Rosyth, Tao Nan, etc.) — these tend to be harder and good for stretching
            • Past PSLE papers — to get familiar with the actual exam format and difficulty level
            • Start with the easier schools first, then work up to the tougher ones closer to PSLE

            But honestly, buying papers alone isn’t enough. The key is reviewing mistakes properly — understanding WHY they got it wrong, not just doing more and more papers.

            We also supplement with online practice. My daughter has been using FunfinityMath which has step-by-step solutions that explain the thinking behind each question. It also has a mock exam feature that times them
            like the real PSLE, so you can track their progress and see which topics still need work. Helps him learn from mistakes without needing us to sit beside him and explain every time 😅

            Hope this helps! Jiayou to our P6 kids! 💪

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            • MerlinxieM Offline
              Merlinxie
              last edited by

              Really appreciate all the tips shared here! Jiayou to all P6 parents! One thing I’d add: don’t underestimate the power of a quiet, consistent revision environment. My daughter used to revise in her room but we found that the dining table (with no phone nearby) helped her focus much better. Also, for subjects like Science where explanations can get confusing, we started using OmniBox Tutor (tryomnibox.com/tutor) — it’s free and lets her ask questions anytime she gets stuck on a concept. She uses it mainly for Science topics but it’s been helpful for other subjects too. The key is not adding more stress but finding what already works and sticking to it. All the best to our kids! 💪

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              • MerlinxieM Offline
                Merlinxie
                last edited by

                Science need to understand the concepts properly, cannot just memorise. My daughter she used to memorise without understanding and she always panic when question wording change slightly. After we started using OmniBox Tutor to break down Science concepts when she confused, gradually she improve. Also, please remember: don’t overlock children. Kiasu is good but health and mental wellbeing also important mah. All the best to all PSLE families!

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