Beaconsfield High School: 11+ Entry Guide for Parents 2026

GL Assessment format, competition data, preparation timeline and expert tips for 2026 entry

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Beaconsfield High School is a Girls' selective grammar school located in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire. It admits approximately 120 Year 7 pupils annually through the Buckinghamshire Secondary Transfer Test — known locally as the Bucks 11+ — which uses GL Assessment and covers verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and mathematics. The test is taken in September of Year 6. Beaconsfield High School is serves the affluent Beaconsfield, Gerrards Cross, and Burnham areas of south Buckinghamshire, where competition is intensified by proximity to London and very high parental aspiration. This guide covers everything parents need to know about 11+ entry for 2026 and 2027, including the test format, competition ratios, preparation timeline, and how to give your child the best possible chance of a place.

What Is the Buckinghamshire 11+ Entrance Exam?

The Buckinghamshire Secondary Transfer Test is the single entrance assessment used by all grammar schools in Buckinghamshire, including Beaconsfield High School. Administered by GL Assessment, it is taken on a single Saturday in September of Year 6 at designated test centres across the county. All children registered for any Buckinghamshire grammar school sit the same test on the same day — there is no separate school-specific entrance exam. The test is standardised by age: a child's raw score is adjusted for their date of birth to ensure that older children in the year group are not unfairly advantaged over younger pupils.

The test comprises three components: verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and mathematics. Verbal reasoning tests a child's ability to recognise patterns in language, decode word meanings, and apply logical rules to sequences and codes. Non-verbal reasoning tests spatial awareness and pattern recognition using shapes, grids, and abstract diagrams — skills that are less tied to curriculum content and more reflective of underlying reasoning ability. The mathematics section covers content broadly aligned with the Key Stage 2 curriculum, including number, fractions, percentages, geometry, data handling, and problem-solving. All three components are presented in multiple-choice format on an answer sheet. The test is timed, and children must work quickly and accurately.

Results are returned to parents as standardised scores. Children who exceed the qualifying threshold are formally assessed as grammar school-able and may list any Buckinghamshire grammar school as a preference on their secondary school application form, submitted to the local authority in October. Approximately 9,500 children sit the Bucks 11+ each year for approximately 1,900 grammar school places across all schools in the county — a pass rate of approximately one in five, or 20%.

Item Details
Entry YearYear 7 (September 2026 for current Year 5 pupils)
Exam BoardGL Assessment (Buckinghamshire Secondary Transfer Test)
Approximate PlacesApproximately 120
Test SubjectsVerbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, mathematics
Test FormatMultiple-choice, standardised by age
Test Date (2026)September 2026 (one Saturday morning, Year 6)
School TypeGirls' selective grammar school
County-Wide Pass RateApproximately 1 in 5 (around 20% of all test-takers qualify)

How Competitive Is Entry to Beaconsfield High School?

Entry to Beaconsfield High School is highly competitive. Buckinghamshire is one of England's few remaining fully selective counties — the majority of state secondary schools in the county are grammar schools, and the Bucks 11+ is the gateway to all of them. Approximately 9,500 children sit the Secondary Transfer Test each September, competing for around 1,900 total grammar school places. Beaconsfield is one of the most affluent areas in England outside London; private tutoring rates in the Beaconsfield area are estimated to exceed 70% among grammar school applicants, making thorough and early preparation essential for competitive entry.

In practice, the effective pass threshold for the most popular schools is higher than the county-wide 20% rate would suggest. Children who score just above the qualifying threshold may find that higher-scoring children fill the available places at their preferred school. For Beaconsfield High School, families should aim to prepare their child to score comfortably above the threshold, not just to scrape past it.

It is also worth understanding what "passing" the Bucks 11+ means. Passing makes a child eligible for any grammar school in the county — it does not guarantee a place at any specific school. Placement depends on the child's standardised score, the preferences listed by the family, and the score distribution in that year's cohort. A child with a high score who lists Beaconsfield High School as their first preference is very likely to secure a place. A child who barely passes and lists it as a preference faces more uncertainty.

Buckinghamshire uses a standardised scoring system, which means that a child born later in the academic year (a "summer birthday") is not penalised for being younger when they sit the test. This is a fair system, but it also means that all children — regardless of birth month — need to reach the same standardised benchmark to qualify.

What Does the Bucks 11+ Test Cover in Detail?

Verbal reasoning is the component most unfamiliar to children who have not prepared specifically for the 11+. GL Assessment verbal reasoning includes question types such as: finding the odd one out in a group of words, inserting a word that completes two other words simultaneously (compound word questions), moving a letter from one word to another, completing analogies ("apple is to fruit as pea is to ___"), number codes applied to words, and sequences of letters or numbers governed by rules. Many of these question formats do not appear anywhere in the primary school curriculum and must be learned deliberately through targeted practice. Because GL Assessment uses consistent question formats, this component is highly trainable.

Non-verbal reasoning involves pattern recognition, spatial rotation, reflection, shape sequences, matrices (finding which shape completes a grid), and analogies expressed through shapes rather than words. Many children find non-verbal reasoning the most surprising component because it tests abilities they have rarely been formally asked to demonstrate. However, it is also highly trainable: once the question types are explained and practised, most children show significant improvement relatively quickly. Non-verbal reasoning is often where the greatest preparation gains can be made in a short period of time.

Mathematics at 11+ level covers the full Key Stage 2 curriculum but with a focus on application and problem-solving rather than rote recall. Children should be fully secure on multiplication, division, fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios, geometry (area, perimeter, angles, coordinates), data handling (mean, mode, median, range, interpreting charts and graphs), and multi-step word problems. The maths section of the Bucks 11+ tests the same content as a strong KS2 SATs preparation, but at a faster pace and with more demanding application questions. The key differentiator is the ability to work accurately under time pressure on problems that require multiple steps of reasoning.

When Should We Start Preparing for the Beaconsfield High 11+?

Most families who successfully prepare children for Beaconsfield High School begin structured 11+ preparation around 12-18 months before the September test. For a child sitting in September 2027, this means starting in Year 4 (autumn or spring term) or at the very latest by September of Year 5. A Year 4 start allows time to build all three subjects from scratch, practice extensively, and enter the exam feeling calm and prepared rather than rushed.

Starting too early — in Year 3, for example — is usually counterproductive unless a child has significant identified gaps to address. Children at this age often lack the maths knowledge base needed for the test, and an excessively long preparation period can cause loss of motivation and anxiety. Starting too late — in the summer term of Year 5, just weeks before the September test — compresses the preparation into an anxious few weeks that leaves children under-prepared and stressed.

The optimal preparation structure covers three phases. In the first phase (roughly months 1-4 of a 12-month plan), the focus is on building the maths curriculum base and introducing verbal and non-verbal reasoning question types for the first time. Many children in Year 4 have never seen a verbal reasoning question — the first phase introduces the formats with no time pressure, building understanding before speed. In the second phase (months 5-8), children work through progressively harder practice papers under timed conditions, identifying and addressing weak areas through targeted support. In the third phase (months 9-12, leading into the September test), the focus shifts to exam stamina, accuracy under time pressure, and confidence-building through full mock tests under realistic conditions.

Children who prepare in this structured, phased way — with a qualified tutor who identifies and addresses gaps — typically outperform children who rely on self-study with workbooks alone, or who begin intensive cramming in the final weeks. The difference is not primarily about natural ability; it is about preparation quality, consistency, and having someone who can explain why answers are what they are rather than just marking them right or wrong.

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What Do High-Scoring Children Do Differently?

Based on our tutors' experience preparing children for the Buckinghamshire 11+, there are clear and consistent differences between children who score well above the qualifying threshold and those who narrowly pass or fall short. These differences are not primarily about raw academic ability — they are about preparation quality, structure, and mindset.

They start early and work consistently. Children who score in the top percentile almost always began preparation at least 12 months before the test. They worked steadily through all three subject areas — not just the ones they already found easiest — and had a tutor who identified gaps and addressed them directly. Consistent weekly practice over a long period builds both knowledge and confidence in ways that last-minute cramming cannot replicate.

They practise under timed conditions regularly. The Bucks 11+ rewards speed as well as accuracy. Children who have done extensive practice under realistic time pressure — including full mock tests under exam conditions — are significantly less anxious on test day and more likely to complete all questions. Children who have only done untimed practice frequently run out of time on sections they understand well but haven't trained to complete quickly.

They understand each question type before the exam. GL Assessment verbal and non-verbal reasoning papers follow a predictable and consistent set of question formats. Children who have been explicitly taught each format — and who understand the underlying logic of each question type — perform significantly more accurately than those who have only guessed their way through practice papers. Understanding the structure of the question is often the key to consistent, reliable performance on novel questions.

They have addressed their maths gaps early. A surprising number of children who underperform on the maths section of the 11+ have specific curriculum gaps — insecure understanding of fractions, or confusion with ratio, or an inability to work with negative numbers quickly — that would have been straightforward to address with a few weeks of targeted teaching. Auditing the KS2 maths curriculum against the child's actual knowledge at the start of preparation, and filling any gaps before moving to timed practice, is one of the highest-value steps a family can take.

They maintain a healthy attitude throughout preparation. Children who perform best on test day are those whose parents have maintained calm, consistent encouragement throughout preparation. Test anxiety is a genuine performance constraint, particularly for children who are aware that this is a high-stakes assessment. Children who have been allowed to develop a relaxed relationship with practice — trying hard, making mistakes, improving over time — perform closer to their true ability on the day itself.

How Does Beaconsfield High School Compare to Other Buckinghamshire Grammars?

Buckinghamshire's 13 grammar schools are united by the shared Bucks 11+ entrance test but differ in character, catchment, specialism, and school ethos. Beaconsfield High School competes for students with Dr Challoner's High School (girls' grammar in Little Chalfont) and Wycombe High School (girls' grammar in High Wycombe), among others. Understanding where Beaconsfield High sits in the local landscape helps families make informed decisions about school preferences when completing the secondary school application.

All Buckinghamshire grammar schools use the same GL Assessment standardised test. This means that a child who qualifies for one is theoretically qualified for all — what determines which school a child attends is primarily the order in which parents list preferences and, where a school is oversubscribed with qualified applicants, whether the child scored highly enough to be prioritised. In practice, the most popular schools attract the highest-scoring children, because families who list them first tend to be those whose children have prepared most carefully.

The choice between grammar schools often comes down to practical factors: distance from home, school type (single-sex vs mixed), specialism or sixth form provision, and co-curricular strengths. For families with more than one child, the distinction between single-sex and mixed schools is often a significant factor. For working parents, the school's location relative to public transport and its after-school provision are important practical considerations. We strongly recommend attending open evenings at Beaconsfield High School — typically held in the autumn term of Year 5 — to form a view of the school's culture and environment that goes beyond published statistics.

For a comprehensive overview of all Buckinghamshire grammar schools and how the Bucks 11+ works as a whole, see our Grammar School Preparation Complete Guide 2026. For a detailed breakdown of the GL Assessment and how it differs from the CEM tests used in other parts of England, see our GL Assessment 11+ Parent Guide 2026. For general guidance on how to approach the test and maximise your child's score, see our How to Pass the 11+ guide for 2026.

For official and up-to-date admissions information, visit the Beaconsfield High School admissions page and the Buckinghamshire Council secondary transfer test pages for the latest registration deadlines and procedures.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the test format for the Beaconsfield High School 11+ exam?

The Beaconsfield High School 11+ uses the Buckinghamshire Secondary Transfer Test, administered by GL Assessment. The test covers three subject areas: verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and mathematics. It is sat in September of Year 6, typically on a Saturday morning, and takes approximately two hours in total. The test is taken at a designated test centre. All children registered for a Buckinghamshire grammar school sit the same standardised test on the same day, and results are standardised for age before being used to rank children. A child who scores above the qualifying threshold is considered grammar school-able and eligible to be considered for Beaconsfield High School.

How competitive is entry to Beaconsfield High School?

Entry to Beaconsfield High School is highly competitive. Approximately 9,500 children across Buckinghamshire sit the Secondary Transfer Test each year, competing for around 1,900 total grammar school places — a county-wide pass rate of roughly one in five. Beaconsfield High School offers approximately 120 places. The standardised pass mark fluctuates slightly year on year depending on cohort performance, but children typically need to score in approximately the top 20-25% of all test-takers to secure a grammar school place. At the most popular schools, the effective score threshold is higher, as the most highly-scoring children tend to preference these schools.

When should we start preparing for Beaconsfield High School?

Most families who successfully prepare children for Beaconsfield High School begin structured 11+ preparation around 12-18 months before the September test — meaning a start in Year 4 or early Year 5 is common and advisable. This allows sufficient time to cover all three test areas (verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and maths) without cramming. Starting in the summer term of Year 5, just weeks before the exam, leaves children under-prepared and anxious. The most effective preparation combines regular practice with proper teaching: understanding why answers are correct, not just drilling past papers. A qualified 11+ tutor makes a measurable difference at this stage.

Does Beaconsfield High School have a designated area and how does it affect chances?

Beaconsfield High School's designated area covers Beaconsfield, Gerrards Cross, and surrounding villages in south Buckinghamshire. The area borders Greater London, bringing high competition from families in Hillingdon and Slough who register Buckinghamshire addresses. In practice, for most Buckinghamshire grammar schools, high-scoring children are admitted regardless of address, and many families travel significant distances to attend their preferred school. However, in years where the school has more qualified applicants than places, the designated area can act as a tie-breaker for children with similar standardised scores. Parents should always check the most recent admissions policy on the school website and contact the Buckinghamshire Grammar Schools Consortium for current-year provisions.

Is the Buckinghamshire 11+ a GL Assessment or CEM test?

The Buckinghamshire Secondary Transfer Test uses GL Assessment, not CEM. This is an important distinction: GL Assessment tests use familiar multiple-choice formats across verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and maths. CEM tests, used in areas such as Birmingham and parts of Kent, blend subjects differently and place more emphasis on comprehension-style questions. Preparation materials for GL Assessment are widely available, making it easier to practise under realistic conditions. However, the standardised scoring means raw scores alone don't determine ranking — performance relative to all other test-takers in the cohort determines who qualifies and who does not.

How can Leading Tuition help with Beaconsfield High School 11+ preparation?

Leading Tuition provides specialist 11+ preparation for Beaconsfield High School and all Buckinghamshire grammar schools. Our tutors are experienced with the GL Assessment format and work with children from Year 4 upwards on verbal reasoning, non-verbal reasoning, and maths. We tailor preparation to each child's specific strengths and gaps rather than following a generic programme. We are rated 4.8/5 on Trustpilot by parents who have used our 11+ tuition services, and our students consistently secure grammar school places including at Beaconsfield High. To book a free consultation or ask about current availability, visit our website or message us on WhatsApp.

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