The Otis-Lennon School Ability Test (OLSAT) is widely used by school districts for gifted program screening and general ability testing. One of its most distinctive features is a tiered level structure — the test is tailored to different grade levels, so the question types your child encounters depend entirely on their grade.
OLSAT Levels by Grade
| Level | Grade | Total Questions | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Kindergarten (entry) | 40 | Oral (read aloud by tester) |
| B | Grade 1 | 40 | Oral + some reading |
| C | Grade 2 | 40 | Primarily reading |
| D | Grade 3 | 40 | Reading |
| E | Grades 4–5 | 40 | Reading |
| F | Grades 6–7 | 40 | Reading |
| G | Grades 8–12 | 40 | Reading |
What Makes Each Level Different
All OLSAT levels include both verbal and nonverbal question types, but the balance and complexity shift significantly as levels increase:
- Levels A–B (K–1): Heavily oral. A test administrator reads questions aloud because young children can't read independently. Questions focus on following directions, aural reasoning, and basic classification.
- Levels C–D (Grades 2–3): Children begin reading questions independently. Verbal content includes verbal analogies, sentence completion, and logical selection. Nonverbal content shifts toward figural analogies and pattern completion.
- Levels E–F (Grades 4–7): More complex verbal reasoning (inferential thinking, verbal classification), more abstract nonverbal reasoning (figural series, figural analogies), and quantitative reasoning (number inference).
- Level G (Grades 8–12): Most abstract. Includes complex logical problems, symbolic reasoning, and multi-step figural series.
OLSAT Verbal vs. Nonverbal
Within each level, the OLSAT divides questions into two broad categories:
- Verbal questions (~50%): Verbal comprehension (following directions, sentence completion, word meaning) and verbal reasoning (analogies, logical selection, inference)
- Nonverbal questions (~50%): Pictorial reasoning (picture classification, picture analogies), figural reasoning (figural classification, figural analogies, pattern matrices), and quantitative reasoning (number series, number inference)
OLSAT Scores Explained
The OLSAT produces a School Ability Index (SAI) — similar to an IQ score, with a mean of 100 and standard deviation of 16. It also produces a percentile rank comparing your child to others of the same grade in the national standardization sample.
- 90th percentile: SAI approximately 120–122 — qualifies for most district gifted programs
- 95th percentile: SAI approximately 125 — qualifies for more selective programs
- 97th+ percentile: SAI approximately 128+ — required for NYC's citywide programs
Prep Focus by Level
- Levels A–B: Focus on listening comprehension, verbal direction-following, and basic picture analogies. Read to your child daily and ask inferential questions like "why do you think the character did that?"
- Levels C–D: Add verbal analogy practice (category, function, part-to-whole relationships) and figural pattern work (matrix puzzles).
- Levels E–G: Add number series practice, complex logical deduction, and multi-step figural pattern recognition. Speed matters more at these levels — practice pacing.
Practice Free
Try our free OLSAT practice questions covering verbal reasoning and figural patterns for your child's level.
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