The TSA is gone. TARA replaces it from 2026. Here is what changed and how to prepare.
If you have been researching Oxford admissions for PPE, Economics, or Human Sciences, you may have encountered references to the TSA (Thinking Skills Assessment). The TSA is discontinued from January 2026 as part of Oxford's wholesale overhaul of its admissions test portfolio. The replacement is TARA (Thinking and Reasoning Assessment). This guide explains what changed, what TARA tests, and how international students should prepare.
Oxford announced in January 2026 that it was replacing most of its pre-existing admissions tests — including the TSA, PAT, MAT, HAT, ELAT, and several subject-specific tests — with a smaller set of new tests administered digitally at Pearson VUE centres. The stated goals were:
The January 2026 overhaul affected admissions for 2027 entry — meaning students applying in October 2026 for entry in October 2027 are the first cohort affected.
TARA stands for Thinking and Reasoning Assessment. It is a computer-delivered test administered at Pearson VUE centres in October each year. For 2027 entry, it is required for:
TARA consists of two components, taken consecutively in a single session:
| Feature | Old TSA (discontinued) | New TARA (from 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery | Paper-based at authorised centres | Computer-based at Pearson VUE worldwide |
| Section 1 | 50 questions: Problem Solving + Critical Thinking, 90 min | Critical Reasoning only, 60 min |
| Mathematics | Yes — Problem Solving required numerical skills | No — entirely maths-free |
| Writing Task | 1 essay from 4 choices, 30 min, no word guide | 1 essay from 3 choices, 30 min, 300–450 words |
| Registration | Through authorised schools/centres (UK-centric) | Direct Pearson VUE registration globally |
Critical Reasoning questions test five main skills: identifying conclusions, identifying assumptions, evaluating arguments, drawing inferences, and spotting flaws. Oxford markers look for precision — the ability to distinguish between what an argument actually claims and what it implies. Vague answers score poorly even when directionally correct.
Practice materials: Official TARA sample materials published by Oxford, plus older TSA Section 1 past papers (the Critical Thinking questions, not the Problem Solving questions). The Cambridge TSA papers are not equivalent. Watson Glaser critical thinking practice materials are also useful for the reasoning skills tested.
The Writing Task is the section where non-native English speakers most often underperform — not because of grammar, but because of argument structure. Oxford markers assess three things: clarity of position, quality of reasoning, and engagement with opposing views. Wordy, hedging essays that "explore both sides" without committing to a position score poorly.
A reliable framework for the 30-minute Writing Task:
For more guidance on the full Oxford PPE application, see our Oxford PPE international students guide and the TARA test preparation guide for detailed practice strategies.
One-to-one specialist tutoring makes a measurable difference for international students preparing for TARA. The core challenge for most international applicants is not ability — it is unfamiliarity with the specific question style and the gaps between their school curriculum and what the test demands. A specialist tutor who knows both your curriculum and the test can compress months of self-directed preparation into targeted sessions focused on precisely what you need.
When selecting a tutor for TARA, look for these qualities:
Leading Tuition's specialist tutors for TARA preparation are recruited based on their own test scores (top 20% of candidates), their curriculum knowledge, and their track record with international students. We currently support students from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, India, Hong Kong, Singapore, the US, and many other countries. Book a free consultation to discuss a personalised preparation plan for your timeline and curriculum background.
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No. The TSA (Thinking Skills Assessment) was discontinued as part of Oxford's January 2026 admissions test overhaul, along with PAT, MAT, HAT, ELAT, and several other pre-existing tests. TARA (Thinking and Reasoning Assessment) is the replacement for PPE, Economics and Management, Human Sciences, and Psychology and Philosophy from 2026 entry onwards.
TARA has two sections. The Critical Reasoning section (60 minutes, multiple choice) tests argument analysis, assumption identification, inference, and logical deduction — similar to the old TSA Section 1 but with new question formats and no mathematics. The Writing Task (30 minutes) asks you to write a structured argument of 300–450 words from a choice of three topics — similar to TSA Section 2 but with an explicit word count guide.
Yes. TARA is a computer-based test administered at Pearson VUE centres worldwide. International students can sit the test in their home country in October, without travelling to the UK or to an Oxford-authorised school. This is one of the key improvements over the old TSA, which required registration through specific authorised centres.
Focus on argument structure rather than grammar. Use a tight four-paragraph plan: opening thesis (one clear sentence), two supporting arguments (one point + one example each), one counterargument with rebuttal, and a brief conclusion. Practice writing 350-word argument essays to a 25-minute time limit three times per week in the month before your test.
TARA replaces TSA for PPE, Economics and Management, Human Sciences, and Psychology and Philosophy. Other courses that used TSA (such as some History and Politics courses) may now use TARA, a different test, or no test — always check the Oxford admissions requirements table for your specific course at the Oxford University website.
Leading Tuition provides specialist one-to-one tutoring for TARA preparation, tailored specifically to your curriculum background — whether IB, AP, CBSE, or another international qualification. Our tutors have sat these tests themselves and achieved top scores: we only hire ESAT/TMUA tutors who scored in the top 20% of candidates. We work with international students worldwide via video, building a personalised preparation plan that accounts for your specific curriculum gaps and the time available before your test date. Rated 4.8/5 on Trustpilot. Book a free consultation or Message us on WhatsApp to discuss your preparation needs.