The ISEE Lower Level is taken by students applying to 5th or 6th grade at private schools — typically current 4th or 5th graders. It's a full-length, competitive exam that tests well above grade level in all areas. Eight weeks of deliberate practice is enough time to make meaningful improvements in every section.

ISEE Lower Level: What's on the Test

SectionQuestionsTimeContent
Verbal Reasoning3420 minSynonyms (17) + Sentence Completion (17)
Quantitative Reasoning3835 minWord problems, number concepts, quantitative comparisons
Reading Comprehension2525 min5–6 passages with 4–5 questions each
Mathematics Achievement3030 minArithmetic, fractions, decimals, geometry, basic algebra
Essay1 prompt30 minUnscored; sent to schools as writing sample

The Scoring Reality

The ISEE Lower Level is normatively scored — your child's percentile compares them to other students who have taken the same level in the past 3 years. Because ISEE test-takers are a self-selected group of private school applicants, national percentile comparisons don't apply. Even an "average" ISEE score represents performance above most of the general student population.

No wrong-answer penalty: every correct answer is worth +1 point, wrong answers and blanks both score zero. Always attempt every question.

8-Week Prep Plan

Assume 4–5 days per week, 30–45 minutes per session.

Weeks 1–2: Vocabulary Foundation

Vocabulary is the highest-leverage area for score improvement on the ISEE. Start by learning word roots, prefixes, and suffixes (Latin and Greek). This is more efficient than memorizing lists. Target 10–15 new root words per week. Use them in sentences to activate long-term memory.

Weeks 3–4: Math — Concepts and Speed

The Quantitative Reasoning section tests math concepts in unfamiliar formats — number series, quantitative comparison (is A bigger, smaller, or equal to B?), and logical word problems. Don't just review arithmetic; practice translating word problems into equations and evaluating relationships between expressions.

Weeks 5–6: Reading Comprehension

ISEE Reading Comprehension includes literary fiction, science passages, historical narratives, and argumentative excerpts. Practice reading each passage once, marking key ideas, then answering all questions by referring back to the text. The most common mistakes are answering from memory rather than the text, and picking "true" answers that aren't what the question asked.

Weeks 7–8: Full-Length Practice and Timed Drills

Take at least 2 full-length timed practice tests under real conditions. After each test, spend as much time reviewing wrong answers as you spent taking the test. Understanding why an answer was wrong is more valuable than getting through more practice questions.

Section-by-Section Strategies

Verbal Reasoning

Quantitative Reasoning

Reading Comprehension

The Essay

While unscored by ERB, the essay is sent directly to admissions offices, where it is read. Admissions directors report that a well-organized, specific essay is helpful — and a rambling, off-topic essay can hurt. Teach your child to:

Practice Free

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