🔍 The Subject That Baffles Every Parent

You’ve been confidently helping with maths and English homework all year. Then you open an 11+ practice paper and see “non-verbal reasoning” for the first time. Strange shapes, rotating patterns, and sequences that make no sense at all.

You stare at the page feeling completely lost. How are you supposed to help your child with something that looks like an alien puzzle?

This frustration hits every parent preparing for the 11+. Non-verbal reasoning feels impossible because it’s unlike anything you remember from school, and your child has never seen it either.

The good news? Non-verbal reasoning follows logical rules once you understand the patterns. Children often find it easier than parents expect because they approach visual puzzles without overthinking the complexity.

What is non-verbal reasoning?

Non-verbal reasoning involves analysing visual information and solving problems using shapes, diagrams and pictures. This is different from verbal reasoning, which involves analysing written information.

Non-verbal reasoning tests several skills:

🎯 Key Skills Tested

🧠
Logic & Problem-Solving

Working through visual problems step-by-step

📐
Spatial Awareness

Understanding how shapes move and transform

🔄
Pattern Recognition

Spotting logical sequences and rules

Non-verbal reasoning questions can be confusing to those who have never come across them before. Getting familiar with basic problem-solving and question types will help your child tackle non-verbal reasoning successfully.

Which exams test it?

Non-verbal reasoning is common in school entrance exams. These exam boards all include non-verbal reasoning:

📋 Main Exam Providers

🎯 GL Assessment

Used by most UK grammar schools

Paper-based test. Schools choose whether to include non-verbal reasoning in a specific paper or combined with other subjects.

🎓 ISEB Common Pre-Test

Common exam for 11+ or 13+ independent school entry

25-minute non-verbal reasoning section. Computer-based and adaptive (questions become more challenging based on performance).

💻 CAT4

Independent school entrance exam or Year 7 streaming test

Tests figure classification, analysis, recognition, and matrices. Usually computer-based, non-adaptive questions.

🔍 Cambridge Select Insight

Used by some independent schools for shortlisting

Each question contains 8 pictures and one missing picture. Children select from four options to complete the set.

Question types

Non-verbal reasoning questions fall into two main categories: interpreting shapes and manipulating 2D and 3D shapes.

📝 Interpreting Shapes

🔗 Pairing Shapes

Two pairs of images (one complete, one incomplete). Figure out the rule that changes the first image into the second, then apply it to complete the missing pair.

🔢 Sequences

Incomplete sequence of images. Choose the option that completes the gap in the sequence.

⬜ Matrices

Grid with one piece missing. Select the image that correctly completes the matrix based on the pattern.

🔐 Find a Code

Images linked to two-letter or three-letter codes. Each letter represents one feature. Work out what each letter represents.

❌ Odd One Out

Find the image that doesn’t fit with the rest of the group.

👥 Match to Group

Choose the option which has the most in common with a group or pair of images.

🔄 Manipulating 2D Shapes

🔍 Parts Within Shapes

Find an image hidden within a complex shape. Three types: which shape is hidden, which is not in the group, which group contains the hidden shape.

🧩 Shape Logic

Three types: combining shapes, forming a shape, forming a silhouette.

🔄 Rotations and Reflections

Work out what a shape would look like if rotated or reflected. Check all elements have been transformed the same way.

📄 Following Folds

Paper folded with shapes cut out. Choose what the paper looks like when unfolded.

📦 Manipulating 3D Shapes

📐 Nets and Cubes

2D net shown, work out what it looks like folded into a cube.

🔄 Rotating 3D Shapes

Choose which image shows the rotation of a 3D shape.

🧱 Combining 3D Shapes

Select blocks that combine to make a 3D shape. Three types: fully visible, partially hidden, obscured.

🔍 3D Shapes From Above

Choose the 2D plan showing what the 3D shape looks like from above.

Example questions

🎯 Worked Examples

🔢 Sequences

Question: Which pattern completes the sequence?

Answer: Option C – the shape rotates one-fifth clockwise each time.

Tip: Focus on one feature at a time: shading, direction, or orientation.

📄 Following Folds

Question: What would this folded paper look like when opened?

Answer: A – it is a symmetrical reflection of the cut-out shapes.

Tip: Look for mirrored placement and distances from the fold line.

📐 Nets and Cubes

Question: Which cube can be made by this net?

Answer: Option A

Tip: Use real objects like dice or Rubik’s Cube to help visualisation. Eliminate “dud” cubes showing shapes not on the net.

Solving process

To tackle most non-verbal reasoning questions, follow this process:

🎯 5-Step Solving Method

1️⃣ Type

What type of question is it?

2️⃣ Analyse

Look at obvious qualities (shape, colour, pattern)

3️⃣ Compare

Find similarities and differences between shapes

4️⃣ Rule

Find a rule from these obvious qualities

5️⃣ Eliminate

Remove options that don’t follow the rule

Preparation strategies

📚 What Actually Works

✏️ Drawing

Drawing simplifies everything. When we picture many shapes in our heads, images become jumbled. Encourage your child to draw shapes out for clearer visualisation.

🎮 Make It Fun

Play Sudoku for logic and attention to detail. Lego builds shape visualisation skills. Jigsaw puzzles develop spatial awareness.

🔄 Consistency

A little bit every day goes a long way. Repetition makes these exercises second nature. Much easier than cramming into long last-minute sessions.

⏸️ Study Breaks

Break every 30 minutes improves productivity. Children come back refreshed and ready for challenges. Reward hard work afterwards.

💡 Remember

Don’t be disheartened if it takes time. Non-verbal reasoning isn’t taught in the national curriculum, so your child is learning completely new skills. Practice makes perfect, and the more questions completed, the faster they become.

What progress looks like

📈 Progress Indicators

👁️ Early Stages

Starts noticing patterns and describing what they see in shapes and sequences

🔍 Building Skills

Identifies simple rotations and reflections, spots obvious patterns

🎯 Developing Strategy

Uses the 5-step process for complex patterns and transformations

⚡ Exam Ready

Tackles unfamiliar question types confidently, works efficiently under time pressure

How our Cambridge tutors help

Non-verbal reasoning requires a different teaching approach than traditional school subjects. Our tutors understand that parents often feel completely lost trying to help with these visual puzzle questions.

Hugh recently completed a DPhil in Surgical Sciences at the University of Oxford and holds a First-Class MSci in Theoretical Physics from Imperial College London. With over a decade of tutoring experience, Hugh has a unique ability to break down spatial reasoning concepts and help children visualise pattern transformations systematically.

Mark achieved a Double First in History from Cambridge and has over 3,000 hours of tutoring experience. He’s guided students through entrance exams for leading schools including Eton, Harrow, Winchester, and St Paul’s. Mark excels at helping children approach visual reasoning with confidence and logical thinking.

Wynn holds a First Class degree in Human, Social and Political Sciences from Cambridge and works extensively with 11+ entrance exams. He helps students develop the 5-step solving process, making complex visual relationships clear and manageable.

Our tutors don’t just teach non-verbal reasoning techniques. They help children develop the spatial thinking and logical reasoning skills that serve them well across all subjects.

Ready to master visual patterns?

Our Cambridge-educated tutors specialise in making non-verbal reasoning accessible for children starting from scratch. We understand the time pressure families face and know exactly how to build both visual reasoning skills and exam confidence efficiently.

Every consultation begins with understanding exactly where your child stands with pattern recognition, then creating a focused plan that makes the best use of your preparation time.

Book Your Free Strategy Session

Discover exactly how to help your child master visual patterns, with a clear action plan you can start using immediately.

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