Introduction
The 10-year series is almost a rite of passage for O-Level students in Singapore. Walk into any Popular bookshop in August and you will see stacks of them. But is grinding every paper in a 10-year series actually the best way to prepare for O-Levels? The answer depends on what subject you are studying, how early you start, and what you do with your mistakes.
What Is the 10-Year Series?
Ten years of past papers, compiled and annotated
The 10-year series (TYS) is a compilation of past O-Level exam papers from approximately the last 10 years, published by Redspot or SAP Education. Most editions include worked solutions, and some include topic-by-topic categorisation. For Mathematics especially, the TYS is genuinely useful because it shows students the full range of question types they are likely to encounter.
The Case for the 10-Year Series
Volume and variety build familiarity
The main advantage of working through a 10-year series is exposure to a wide range of question formats. In Mathematics, repeatedly encountering trigonometry or integration questions in slightly different forms builds pattern recognition. For students who start preparation early — by Secondary 3 or early Secondary 4 — the TYS provides a structured, comprehensive base.
The Risks of Over-Relying on Old Papers
Syllabuses change; older papers may mislead
O-Level syllabuses are revised periodically. Papers from 10 years ago may include question types that are no longer examined, or omit topics that have since been added. For science subjects especially, the emphasis on application over recall has shifted meaningfully over the past decade. Students who solely rely on older papers may be optimising for a slightly different exam.
The Case for Recent Past Papers
The last three years are the most predictive
For students with limited preparation time — starting intensive revision in Secondary 4 Term 2 or 3 — recent past papers (the last 3 years) are more valuable than older ones. They reflect the current syllabus emphasis, the current difficulty calibration, and the current marking scheme philosophy.
The Optimal Revision Strategy
Combine both — but use them differently
The approach we recommend at OutClass Education: use the 10-year series in topic-by-topic mode during Secondary 3 and early Secondary 4 to build familiarity with question types. Then switch to full timed papers using only the most recent 3–5 years as the exam approaches. After each paper, spend at least as long reviewing mistakes as you did attempting the paper — this is where most students shortchange themselves.
This is exactly the model we use in our Secondary Math and Science classes — structured topic-based practice early in the year, timed examination conditions later, and consistent mistake analysis throughout.