Most private schools that require admissions testing accept either the ISEE (Independent School Entrance Exam) or the SSAT (Secondary School Admissions Test) — and a significant number accept both. Understanding the differences helps you choose the right test for your child's strengths and your target schools.

At a Glance

ISEE

  • 4 levels: Primary, Lower, Middle, Upper
  • Grades 2–12
  • ~2.5–3 hours
  • No guessing penalty
  • Essay (not scored, sent to schools)
  • Publisher: ERB
  • Test 3× per year per level

SSAT

  • 3 levels: Elementary, Middle, Upper
  • Grades 3–11
  • ~2.5–3 hours
  • Guessing penalty (−¼ point)
  • Essay (not scored, sent to schools)
  • Publisher: SSATB
  • Test 8× per year

Key Structural Differences

Guessing Penalty

This is the biggest practical difference. The SSAT subtracts ¼ point for each wrong answer. The ISEE does not penalize wrong answers — blank answers and wrong answers both score zero. This changes strategy significantly:

Students who tend to be impulsive guessers may do better on the ISEE. Students who are careful and methodical may do well on either.

Test Sections Compared

SectionISEESSAT
VerbalSentence Completion + SynonymsAnalogies + Synonyms
ReadingReading ComprehensionReading Comprehension
MathQuantitative Reasoning + Math AchievementQuantitative (one section)
WritingEssay (unscored)Essay (unscored)
ExperimentalYes (unscored)Yes (unscored)

One important distinction: the SSAT uses verbal analogies as a major question type ("Cat is to kitten as dog is to ___"). The ISEE uses sentence completion instead ("The scientist was _______ in her approach, never accepting a hypothesis without thorough evidence"). Students who are strong at word relationships may prefer the SSAT; those with strong contextual reading may prefer the ISEE.

How Scores Are Reported

ISEE: Reports a scaled score and a percentile rank compared to students who took the same level in the past 3 years. This means you're compared only to private school applicants — a much more selective reference group than national norms.

SSAT: Also uses a percentile rank compared to other SSAT test-takers. SSAT percentiles tend to look lower than expected for the same reason — you're competing against a self-selected group of private school applicants.

Both tests also report stanine scores (1–9). Most top private schools are looking for stanines of 7–9 in the sections relevant to their program.

Which Test to Choose

Prep Strategy for Both

Both tests heavily reward vocabulary. Building a strong vocabulary through wide reading and explicit word study in the 6–12 months before testing produces the highest ROI. For math, both tests cover similar content: arithmetic, fractions, ratios, algebra basics, and geometry through the level-appropriate curriculum.

Practice Free

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