Thirty days is enough time to meaningfully improve your child's performance on the CogAT — not by drilling test tricks, but by strengthening the actual cognitive skills the test is designed to measure. The key is short, daily sessions that build habits and prevent burnout.
This plan assumes 15–20 minutes of focused practice per day, six days a week, with Sundays off. It's divided into four one-week phases, each targeting a specific skill set.
Why 30 Days Works
The CogAT is not an achievement test — it doesn't test what your child has memorized in school. It measures reasoning ability: how well a child can spot patterns, draw analogies, and think spatially. These skills respond well to consistent, low-pressure exposure. You don't need a tutor or expensive software. You need repetition, feedback, and variety.
Week 1: Verbal Analogies (Days 1–7)
Goal: Build the "relationship thinking" muscle
Verbal analogies ask: "Apple is to fruit as carrot is to ___." The skill is identifying the relationship between the first pair, then applying it. Start with concrete, familiar categories.
- Days 1–2: Introduce category relationships at dinner. "Dog is to animal as rose is to ___." Let your child explain their reasoning out loud.
- Days 3–4: Add function relationships. "Scissors is to cut as hammer is to ___." Emphasize the action, not just the object.
- Days 5–6: Try part-to-whole. "Finger is to hand as toe is to ___." Mix in all three types for variety.
- Day 7: Timed mini-quiz — 6 verbal analogy questions in 5 minutes. Track time, praise effort.
Week 2: Number Patterns & Quantitative Reasoning (Days 8–14)
Goal: Spot rules in sequences, not just calculate
The CogAT Quantitative Battery tests number sequences and mathematical relationships — not arithmetic. A child who struggles with multiplication can still excel here by identifying the rule.
- Days 8–9: Simple counting patterns: 2, 4, 6, 8 and 3, 6, 9, 12. Ask "what's the rule?" not "what's next?"
- Days 10–11: Alternating patterns: 1, 3, 2, 4, 3, 5, ___. Two steps forward, one back. These are harder but common.
- Days 12–13: Number analogies: "2 is to 6 as 3 is to ___." The rule is ×3. Help your child see the operation, not just the answer.
- Day 14: Play "secret rule" — you think of a number rule, your child asks yes/no questions to figure it out. Reversal builds deep understanding.
Week 3: Nonverbal / Spatial Reasoning (Days 15–21)
Goal: Think in shapes and matrices
The Nonverbal Battery uses figure matrices — grids of shapes where one cell is missing. No reading required. This section is the most trainable with the right activities.
- Days 15–16: Tangram puzzles (physical or app-based). 10 minutes of rotating and fitting shapes trains spatial rotation — directly tested on the CogAT.
- Days 17–18: Paper folding. Fold a sheet twice, punch a hole, unfold — ask your child to predict where the holes will appear before unfolding. This is a common CogAT question type.
- Days 19–20: Pattern matrix practice. Draw a 2×2 grid of shapes on paper with one square empty — shapes change size or color in a pattern. Have your child complete it.
- Day 21: Mixed spatial puzzles — Tetris, building block challenges, or a 3D puzzle. Keep it fun.
Week 4: Mixed Practice & Test Simulation (Days 22–30)
Rotate through all three skill areas each day. Use this structure:
- Days 22–25: 5 verbal analogies → 5 number patterns → 5 figure matrices. Time each section loosely (2–3 minutes per set). Discuss any errors calmly.
- Days 26–27: Full timed mini-tests. 18 questions (6 per battery) in 15 minutes. This builds pacing and reduces anxiety on test day.
- Days 28–29: Rest and review. Go over any question types that still feel hard. Do only 10 minutes. Avoid fatigue before the real test.
- Day 30: Celebrate. The prep is done. On test day: good sleep, a real breakfast, and a calm reminder that this is just a chance to show what they know.
What Not to Do
- Don't practice for more than 25 minutes at a stretch. Attention wanders and quality drops.
- Don't tell your child the test will determine their future. This creates anxiety that suppresses performance.
- Don't focus only on wrong answers. Reviewing why correct answers are right reinforces pattern recognition.
- Don't skip the verbal section if your child is "good at math." All three batteries contribute equally to the composite score.
Materials You'll Need
You don't need to buy anything. OpenKidsPrep's free CogAT practice questions cover all three batteries. For physical activities, use tangram sets (under $10 on Amazon) or just paper and pencil for drawing pattern matrices. The 30-day plan above requires nothing more than time and consistency.
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Try our free CogAT practice questions covering all three batteries — verbal, quantitative, and nonverbal.
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