NSW OC Practice Tests With Answers — Year 4

Year 4Reading · Mathematical Reasoning · Thinking SkillsFree · no loginNSW DoE

NSW OC practice questions for Year 4, each with a full worked-solution answer revealed after you select a response. Free, no signup, no credit card.

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About the exam

Placement test for Year 4 students applying for Opportunity Class entry in Year 5 across NSW government primary schools. Administered by Cambridge Assessment for the NSW Department of Education.

Quick facts

Who sits itYear 4 students
SectionsReading · Mathematical Reasoning · Thinking Skills
WhenMay — computer-based at external test centres
Administering bodyNSW Department of Education (delivered by Cambridge Assessment)

Sample questions at this year level and subject

These are Year 5 Reading questions from Skillo's general practice bank — not written specifically for the NSW OC test. Every question includes a worked-solution answer once you select a response.

SAMPLE QUESTION 1Medium

Read the passage below, then answer the question. Australia has strict biosecurity laws to protect its unique wildlife and agricultural industries from introduced pests and diseases. Travellers arriving in Australia must declare any food, plants, or animal products they are carrying. Items that could carry insects, seeds, or bacteria may be confiscated at the border. The cane toad is a well-known example of the damage introduced species can cause — it was brought to Australia in 1935 to control beetles on sugar cane farms but instead spread rapidly, harming native wildlife. This history explains why Australia takes biosecurity so seriously. What lesson does the passage suggest Australians have learned from the cane toad?

AIntroducing animals from overseas always helps farmers
BNative wildlife can adapt quickly to new species
CIntroduced species can cause serious and unintended damage
DSugar cane farming should be banned in Australia

Select an answer to reveal the worked solution.

SAMPLE QUESTION 2Medium

In the sentence 'The lyrebird is one of nature's greatest mimics,' what does the word 'mimics' most closely mean?

ACreatures that copy sounds or actions
BBirds that build large nests
CAnimals that travel long distances
DSingers that invent brand-new songs

Select an answer to reveal the worked solution.

SAMPLE QUESTION 3Medium

Two readers reviewed the same novel. Reviewer 1 called it 'beautifully restrained.' Reviewer 2 called it 'frustratingly vague.' What does this disagreement MOST suggest?

AWhether a literary quality is a strength or weakness depends on what a reader values
BOne of the reviewers must not have read the whole novel carefully
CThe author failed to make their intentions clear enough for readers to understand
DLiterary criticism is unreliable and should not be used to judge the quality of books

Select an answer to reveal the worked solution.

SAMPLE QUESTION 4Medium

The archaeologist's analysis was incisive — she identified the critical flaw in the previously accepted dating method within minutes of examining the evidence, and explained it clearly in a way that reframed the entire field. What does 'incisive' MOST likely mean?

ACareful and methodical, working through evidence slowly and without error
BSharp and penetrating, quickly identifying what is most important or most flawed
CConfident and persuasive, presenting findings in a way that others readily accept
DWell-researched and thorough, based on many years of study in the same field

Select an answer to reveal the worked solution.

SAMPLE QUESTION 5Medium

Why does the author end the passage by telling readers to listen carefully on a forest walk?

ATo warn readers that lyrebirds can be dangerous
BTo connect the information to the reader's own experience and spark curiosity
CTo explain how to record bird calls with a camera
DTo prove that kookaburras are more common than lyrebirds

Select an answer to reveal the worked solution.

How to prepare

Worked solutions matter most for reading comprehension: they show how to trace an answer back to specific evidence in the passage, which is the skill OC reading questions actually test.

Have your child explain the worked solution back in their own words — if they can, they understood the reasoning rather than just recognising the correct letter.

Common questions

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Who can sit OC?

Year 4 students at a NSW government school, or applying to attend one, who are Australian citizens or permanent residents. Successful students enter the OC program in Year 5.

How many OC places are available?

About 1,840 OC places are offered each year across 77 NSW schools, plus Aurora College for rural and remote students. Around 12,000 to 13,000 students apply annually, so success rates are roughly 15% statewide.

What is a competitive score?

NSW DET does not publish numerical cut-off scores. Students receive performance band placements per section (e.g. top 10%, next 15%, next 25%, lowest 50%). Competitive metropolitan OC schools typically admit students placing in the top 10 to 20% of applicants.

Are worked solutions included with every question?

Yes. Every sample question includes a full worked solution — select an answer to reveal the explanation instantly, free, with no signup.

More free practice

Start practice (10 questions) →

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About this practice

Skillo's NSW Opportunity Class-style practice is authored independently. The NSW Opportunity Class Placement Test is administered by the NSW Department of Education with delivery by Cambridge Assessment. Skillo is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the NSW Department of Education or Cambridge Assessment.