About Grade 12 Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) in the Ethiopian curriculum
The Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) is one of the three subjects every Ethiopian ESSLCE student sits, regardless of stream. After the 2014 curriculum reform, the SAT became a two-section paper: Verbal Reasoning (around 58%) and Quantitative Reasoning (around 42%). Unlike subject-knowledge papers, the SAT tests reasoning method — speed and pattern recognition matter as much as raw knowledge.
Topics covered
- Verbal: vocabulary in context
- Verbal: analogies and word relationships
- Verbal: sentence completion
- Verbal: reading comprehension (short passages)
- Verbal: reading comprehension (long passages)
- Verbal: logical reasoning and argument analysis
- Quantitative: arithmetic and number properties
- Quantitative: algebra and equation solving
- Quantitative: geometry and coordinate geometry
- Quantitative: data interpretation (tables, charts, graphs)
- Quantitative: word problems and problem-solving
- Quantitative: probability, statistics, and counting
Notes on PrepX
Topic-by-topic study notes anchored to the official Ethiopian textbook. Designed for the building phase — before past-paper drilling becomes productive.
PrepX includes 12 years of SAT ESSLCE papers with worked solutions that focus on the elimination strategies for verbal sections and the shortcut methods for quantitative sections. SAT scoring rewards speed; PrepX past-paper drills include per-question time targets.
How to study Grade 12 SAT for the matric exam
Notes are the foundation phase: do not skip them, do not skim them. Strong notes mastery is what makes past-paper drilling productive instead of frustrating.
The SAT is a method exam, not a knowledge exam. Three habits move the score most: (1) on verbal questions, learn the four wrong-answer trap patterns (too broad, too narrow, contradicts the passage, plausible but unsupported) — they reappear every year and being able to eliminate two options instantly doubles your speed; (2) on quantitative questions, practice estimation and elimination rather than full calculation — for most multiple-choice questions, one of the four options can be eliminated by rough estimate alone; (3) time yourself ruthlessly — the SAT is harder for slow careful workers than for fast pattern-matchers. PrepX timed-quiz mode is designed for exactly this drill.