What are KS2 SATs? KS2 SATs (Key Stage 2 Standard Assessment Tests) are short national tests Year 6 children take in May. They check Reading, Maths and SPaG (Grammar, Punctuation & Spelling).

Which tests are in KS2 SATs?

The tests are:

  • Maths — three papers: Arithmetic and two Reasoning papers (problem solving, shape, measure, simple algebra).
  • Reading — one paper with three texts to read and answer questions about.
  • SPaG — grammar & punctuation paper, plus a short spelling test.

How are SATs scored?

Each test is marked and converted into a scaled score. A score of 100 or more means the child is working at the expected standard. Scores above 110 show high attainment.

Quick note: Writing is teacher-assessed and not an exam. Science tests are only for some schools.

Simple ways to practise

Daily short practice

10–15 minutes a day is better than one long session.

Read every day

15 minutes of reading builds stamina and helps all subjects.

Times tables

Know them to 12×12 — this helps speed in arithmetic questions.

How parents can help

  1. Keep practice short and positive — celebrate small wins.
  2. Try one short past paper per week; review mistakes together.
  3. Talk about reading: ask your child to tell you the main idea in a few sentences.

Common questions

When are the tests?
Tests take place in May each year — your school will share specific dates.
Do SATs decide everything?
No — they help teachers plan Year 7 lessons and show what help a child might need. They are one measure, not a final judgment.

Quick revision plan (one page)

  1. Mon–Fri: 10 minutes arithmetic + 15 minutes reading.
  2. Weekend: One short paper (30–40 mins) and chat about any mistakes.
  3. Keep praise and small rewards ready — encourage curiosity, not anxiety.

If you'd like, I can:

  • Make a printable PDF of this guide for parents
  • Turn this into a kid-friendly one-page postcard
  • Add gentle animations or a short embedded explainer video