For many parents, Verbal Reasoning is the most confusing part of the 11+.
It doesn’t look like normal school work.
And many children have never seen these question types before.
This guide explains what it really is — and how to improve it effectively.
What Is Verbal Reasoning?
Verbal Reasoning tests a child’s ability to:
- Understand and use language logically
- Recognise patterns in words and letters
- Solve problems using reasoning, not memorisation
Typical question types include:
- Word relationships (e.g. synonyms, antonyms)
- Letter sequences
- Codes (changing letters into symbols or numbers)
- Missing words in sentences
Key point:
This is not about school knowledge.
It is about how a child thinks
Why Children Find It Difficult
There are three main reasons:
1. It Is Unfamiliar
Most primary schools do not teach Verbal Reasoning directly.
So children are seeing these question types for the first time.
2. It Requires Vocabulary
Even logic-based questions rely on:
- Understanding word meanings
- Recognising relationships
3. It Requires Speed
Questions are often:
- Short
- Timed
- Repetitive
Children must think quickly and accurately
Can Verbal Reasoning Be Improved?
Yes — but not instantly.
What improves:
- Familiarity with question types
- Vocabulary
- Pattern recognition
What does NOT work:
- Random guessing
- Only doing lots of papers without understanding
Improvement comes from practice + understanding
Step 1: Learn the Question Types
This is the most important first step.
Why it matters:
Many questions follow patterns.
Once a child understands the type:
- They can solve similar questions faster
What to do:
- Study one type at a time
- Practise repeatedly
- Review mistakes
Step 2: Build Vocabulary Alongside Practice
Verbal Reasoning is not purely logic.
Focus on:
- Synonyms and antonyms
- Word meanings
- Common prefixes and suffixes
Best method:
- Learn words in context (reading)
- Not isolated lists
Vocabulary supports reasoning
Step 3: Practise Little but Often
Avoid long sessions.
Better approach:
- 15–25 minutes per session
- Regular practice (3–5 times per week)
Consistency builds familiarity
Step 4: Focus on Accuracy Before Speed
Many children rush too early.
Early stage:
- Understand the method
- Solve slowly and correctly
Later stage:
- Introduce time limits
- Improve speed gradually
Speed comes after understanding
Step 5: Review Mistakes Properly
This is where most progress happens.
Ask:
- Why was this wrong?
- What pattern did I miss?
- How should I approach it next time?
Mistakes are learning opportunities
Step 6: Introduce Timed Practice (Later)
Once confident:
- Use timed sections
- Simulate exam conditions
This builds:
- Speed
- Confidence
- Familiarity
A Simple Weekly Plan
3–4 days:
- Learn + practise question types
1–2 days:
- Review mistakes
1 day:
- Light mixed practice
Keep sessions short and focused
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Starting timed practice too early
- Ignoring vocabulary
- Doing too many papers without review
- Jumping between too many question types
These reduce efficiency
What to Read Next
To build a complete preparation plan:
- How to prepare for the 11+
- 11+ English preparation guide
- Non-verbal reasoning explained
Bottom Line
Verbal Reasoning is unfamiliar — but learnable.
Children improve when they:
- Understand question types
- Build vocabulary
- Practise consistently
There are no shortcuts
—but there is a clear path