Weβre in that strange part of SEAG prep where the novelty has worn off, the finish line still feels miles away, and SEAG prep motivation isβ¦ well, dwindling away. Sound familiar? Youβre not alone! Keeping your child engaged, positive and productive during SEAG prep can feel like trying to nail jelly to a wall. But donβt panic parents! Iβm going to get you through these last few months. We can do it! In this post, Iβll share practical, realistic ways to keep your child motivated, without bribing them with 73 packets of Haribo or an unlimited supply of V-Bucks!
Want to give your child a real head start before school kicks off again? My SEAG-style mock test days are the perfect way to ease them back into formal testing mode and shake off the summer brain fog! These sessions help boost confidence, highlight areas to focus on, and get them comfortable with the real SEAG entrance assessment format. Spaces have been filling up fast, so if itβs on your mind, donβt wait. Click here to book your childβs place now!

Staying Motivated When the Finish Line Feels Far Away
Letβs face it, SEAG prep isnβt exactly a thrilling rollercoaster ride (unless weβre counting the emotional ups and downs!). Around this time, motivation can start to fizzle out and even the most determined kids might start dragging their heels. The good news? You donβt need to turn into a motivational speaker or start handing out gold medals. A few simple tweaks to your routine and mindset can make all the difference. Here are some tried-and-tested ways to keep your child engaged, encouraged, and maybe even enjoying the process (a tutor can dream, right?!).

Set Goals That Actually Feel Achievable
Letβs be honest, telling your child to βjust revise everythingβ is about as helpful as giving them a suitcase with no wheels and asking them to run a marathon! Instead, break it down. Tiny, manageable goals feel far less overwhelming and way more doable. Something like:
- Letβs improve your punctuation score by 2 marks in the SEAG test papers this week.
- Letβs practise word problems for 15 minutes tomorrow.β
- Letβs aim to finish that comprehension without rushing the last 4 questions.
Little goals = little wins. And little wins = confidence boosters. The more your child feels successful, the more motivated theyβll be to keep going. Bonus tip? Make it visual. A sticker chart, a tick list, or a βnailed itβ jar, whatever works for your childβs interests. Even students that are βtoo cool for school,β love a wee reward or prize!

Mix Things Up a Bit (Because Nobody Wants to Do Comprehension 5 Days a Week)
Even the most motivated students will start to drag their feet if every SEAG session looks the same. And letβs face it, if youβre bored explaining it, theyβre probably bored hearing it! The secret? Variety! For example:
- One day you do a SEAG test timed paper.
- Another day itβs a game of βBeat the Clockβ or βHit the Buttonβ or another game.
- Friday could be βTeach the Parentβ day, where they explain how to solve a maths problem to you. If they can teach it, they understand it!
Switch between comprehension, problem-solving, grammar, punctuation and spelling, but keep the format fresh. Use whiteboards, sticky notes, flashcards, even get outside and write the answers in chalk on the patio. This definitely counts as learning!
Pssstβ¦Need a hand with this? Iβve got the best SEAG prep books for you! My SEAG revision books are packed with engaging activities that are aligned with the Northern Ireland curriculum and designed to build confidence without overwhelming your child. Theyβre the perfect companion for your prep toolkit! Click here to grab yours!

Celebrate Progress, Not Just Perfection – Growth is the Goal!
Hereβs the truth: your child doesnβt need to score 100% on every SEAG assessment paper. They need to learn from the ones they didnβt achieve as high as they expected. Celebrate the small wins. This can be a few extra marks in the comprehension section, getting through a paper without tears, spotting and correcting their own mistakes. Thatβs the goal! Thatβs what builds real confidence. Here are some things you can do to make your childβs confidence soar!
- Start a βLook How Far Youβve Comeβ folder. Pop in marked papers, Post-Its with proud moments, even screenshots of improved scores!
- Point out the things they didnβt used to get right that theyβre smashing now.
- And yes, if they do get a perfect score, absolutely break out the celebratory snacks. But letβs teach them that trying again, sticking with it, and improving, thatβs what matters most.
This mindset builds long-term resilience AND it makes the wobbly days feel a lot less scary.

Make Room for Breaks and Downtimeβ¦Yes, Even Now!
I know, I knowβ¦the SEAG test is looming and your instinct might be to go full steam ahead, tackle every practice paper and live and breathe revision. But hereβs the catch, brains donβt thrive on burnout. And neither do 10 or 11 year olds. Rest is productive. It helps your child absorb what theyβve learned, recharge emotionally, and return to their prep with focus and energy, instead of sulking into their workbook.
That means:
- Short, focused revision bursts – 30-45 minutes max followed by screen-free chill time or a snack.
- Downtime thatβs actually relaxing β think playing outside, building Lego, watching their fave show, or having a dance party in the kitchen.
- At least one full day off a week from any SEAG talk. You included!
Build breaks into your childβs study plan so they feel rested and ready to take on the world! Trust me, a well-rested child will always do better than an overworked one. Even in November!

Use Praise That Actually Motivates
We all know our kids love a bit of praise, but how we give it out matters. A LOT. Generic βWell done!β comments are nice, but they wonβt always light that motivational fire. To really boost your childβs drive, try specific, effort-focused praise. Hereβs what that looks like:
- Instead of βGood job!β Try βI noticed you kept trying even when that question was tricky. That’s the skills that will help you fly through the real SEAG!β Or, βYou really focused during that comprehension task, your answers showed great attention to detail.β
- Another example is, βYou used your working out to double-check! Thatβs exactly what good mathematicians do!β

Why it works
This kind of praise helps your child connect effort with progress. It reinforces what they did right, not just that they got it right. And thatβs key for long-term motivation, especially when those practice papers start to get a bit much or their scores go down. Bonus motivation trick, start a “Wow Wall” or a little notebook of praise at home. Every time they do something worth celebrating, big or small, write it down. They can look back on it when they need a confidence boost.

Keep SEAG in Perspective
Hereβs the truth no one likes to say out loud: the SEAG Transfer Test is important, but itβs not everything. I know, I know , that might sound strange coming from someone who eats, sleeps, and breathes SEAG prep. But hear me outβ¦The test is a moment, not the measure of your child. The results wonβt show their kindness. They wonβt capture their creativity, empathy, or sense of humour. They wonβt reflect how hard theyβve worked or how far theyβve come.
Yes, we want to give them every chance to do their best. Yes, weβre aiming high. But weβre not building robots who only thrive in test conditions. Weβre raising confident, resilient, well-rounded little humans, and that is worth way more than a grade or a score.
So when motivation dips (and it will), remind them of this, no test will ever define who they are. Their future is not pinned to one piece of paper in January. And remind yourself too, because parents need perspective just as much as pupils.

More information on SEAG prep
How to Help Your Child Avoid Silly Mistakes in the SEAG Transfer Tests
SEAG preparation: 10 things you need to know about this September
The powerful benefits of your child sitting mock transfer tests
I hope this blog post has opened your eyes to how the last push for the SEAG test Northern Ireland should be. SEAG prep can feel overwhelming, but just remember, itβs not about perfection. Itβs about progress, consistency, and showing up. Even when no one wants to open that hundredth practice paper! Keep things calm, stay connected, and celebrate the small wins. Your encouragement, support and belief in your child go further than you think, especially on the tough days. So take a deep breath, trust yourself, and know this, youβre doing brilliantly!
And donβt worryβ¦the SEAG prep will be over before you know it!


