Secondary 5 Ministry Exams: Study Guide for June 2026 | TutorAide
Your teenager is in Secondary 5. It’s the year that matters most — not because the material is harder than previous years, but because the final grades feed directly into the cote R that determines CEGEP admissions. At the heart of it all are ministry exams worth 50% of every grade they touch.
Here’s what you need to know for June 2026, subject by subject, without sugar-coating it.
What Changes Between Secondary 4 and Secondary 5 Ministry Exams
In Secondary 4, your child has already faced ministry exams — history, science, math. The format won’t be a surprise. What changes in Secondary 5 is three things.
First, the subjects are different. The French writing exam (épreuve unique) becomes the exam of the year, English Second Language is added, and math is only present for students who continued taking it.
Second, the stakes go up. Secondary 5 final grades flow directly into the cote R used by CEGEPs and universities. A lower French grade because of a bad day on the writing exam costs you during admissions in the fall.
Third, this is the year stress shows up the most — end of high school, CEGEP applications already filed in March, program choices, and for many teens their first truly high-stakes exam. Worth taking seriously without dramatizing.
For a broader overview of all ministry exams (elementary through Secondary 5), see our comprehensive ministry exams preparation guide.
French Language of Instruction, Writing Exam: June 8, 2026
Date and time: Monday, June 8, 2026, 9:00 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
This is the exam that consumes Secondary 5 students’ minds, with good reason. Students receive a preparatory dossier (3 to 5 texts on a single theme) a few days before the exam, to read and annotate in class. On exam morning, they discover the specific prompt and have 3 hours 15 minutes to produce an argumentative text of approximately 500 words that defends a clear thesis using evidence from the dossier.
The Ministry evaluates five criteria: relevance and sufficiency of ideas, textual coherence, register of language, vocabulary, and spelling/syntax/punctuation. None of these criteria forgive a poorly organized text or one full of errors.
Practical advice: the worst mistake on the Secondary 5 French exam is not having a fast, reliable writing plan. Three minutes building an outline at the start of the exam often saves 30 minutes of chaotic rewriting later. Have your child practice the exact format — they get a dossier, they have 3 hours 15 minutes, they produce an argumentative text. No simplified versions. The Alloprof website offers past exam prompts and grading rubrics.
For deeper strategies on writing and grammar at the secondary level, see our French tutoring page.
English Second Language: Late May – Early June 2026
Date: varies by school service centre (typically between May 25 and June 5, 2026)
All Secondary 5 students take the English Second Language ministry exam. There are two versions: English as a Second Language (regular program) and Enriched English as a Second Language. The format differs by program.
In the regular program, the exam includes reading comprehension and oral interaction (with another student or with the teacher). In the enriched program, a written production component is added — students produce a structured text on a given topic.
Practical advice: the English ministry exam is less about knowledge and more about fluency. A student who understands English on screen but freezes when speaking will underperform on oral interaction. In the weeks before the exam, short English conversations — 10 to 15 minutes per day — prepare better than hours of grammar drills. If your child is in the enriched program, have them practice timed writing on a specific topic at least three times before the exam.
Mathematics Secondary 5: June 18, 2026
Date and time: Thursday, June 18, 2026, 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
This exam only concerns students who continued taking math in Secondary 5 — Math CST 5, Math TS 5, or Math SN 5. Many students stop taking math after Secondary 4; for them, there’s nothing here.
For those who do take it, content depends on the sequence:
- Math SN 5 (Sciences Naturelles) — exponential, logarithmic, sinusoidal and tangent functions, vectors, advanced analytical geometry. The sequence for future students in pure sciences, engineering, and certain health sciences.
- Math TS 5 (Technico-Sciences) — functions, equations and systems, analytical geometry, optimization. Oriented toward applied problem-solving.
- Math CST 5 (Culture, Society and Technical) — financial applications, probability, statistics, linear optimization. The most applied program.
Each sequence has its own ministry exam, and each counts for 50% of the final grade. That final grade enters the cote R, and many CEGEP programs require specific prerequisites (often Math TS 5 or SN 5).
Practical advice: the big difference between Secondary 4 and Secondary 5 math is conceptual depth. In Secondary 4, many problems follow a standard procedure. In Secondary 5, the exam asks students to combine multiple concepts in the same problem. Doing complete past exams under real conditions (3 hours, no fake breaks) is more useful than 50 isolated exercises. Our mathematics page breaks down what each sequence covers.
Revision Strategies Specific to Secondary 5
Focus on format, not just content
Many Secondary 5 students know their material but lose points on form. In French, it’s an introduction that doesn’t state the thesis clearly. In math, it’s not writing out the solution method. In English, it’s freezing for 10 seconds at the start of the oral. Form is something you can fix, and it’s fast once you’ve identified it.
Use ministry past exam papers
The Ministry publishes past exams with answer keys and grading rubrics. Have your child do at least two complete French writing exams before June 8. For math, three complete exams under real conditions outperform any worksheet pile.
The French preparatory dossier is worth all your time
Students receive the preparatory dossier 4 to 5 days before the exam. Those days are gold. Reading each text, taking structured notes, identifying 3-4 strong arguments per text — that work determines the quality of the writing on exam morning. A poorly prepared dossier means a poorly argued text.
Pay attention to sleep in the final two weeks
Secondary 5 is the year teens sleep the least — social media, end of school year, social life, anxiety. But a brain running on 5 hours of sleep doesn’t perform on exam day. Starting May 25, screens off at 10:30 p.m., bedtime by 11:00. Non-negotiable.
Address gaps now, not in June
If your child has been at 65% in French all year and they’re worried about the writing exam, May is when that gets fixed, not June. Five or six targeted sessions with a tutor or with their teacher on argumentative text structure can lift a final grade by 5 to 8 points. By June, it’s too late — they’ll have already taken the exam.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
“I’ll just re-read the preparatory dossier.” The dossier is something you work, not something you read. Annotate, highlight, build a table of arguments by text — anything that forces the brain to organize information. Passive reading doesn’t stick.
“English is easy, I don’t need to prepare.” The enriched English exam catches many students off guard. The written production demands a structured text, not just vocabulary. If your child is in the enriched program, have them practice timed writing at least three times before the exam.
“I can review everything the week before.” In Secondary 5, exams come back-to-back from June 8 to 18. A student who starts revising on June 1 has to pick between French and math — they can’t do both well. Start now.
“If I fail, I can retake in August.” Technically true, but retaking exams in August while friends enjoy summer and your CEGEP file sits in limbo is a scenario worth avoiding at all costs.
Cote R and Why These Exams Really Matter
Quick reminder: the cote R (collegiate performance score) is what CEGEPs and universities use to compare students. It’s calculated from final Secondary 5 grades, adjusted for the strength of the group. A weak final grade in French because of a botched writing exam drags the cote R down, and several competitive CEGEP programs require a minimum cote R (often around 28-30, sometimes higher).
This isn’t to scare anyone — it’s to remind you that preparing for Secondary 5 ministry exams is also preparing for CEGEP admissions. The two files are linked.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many hours of revision per week in Secondary 5?
For a student who’s already keeping up with their courses and taking French + English + math, plan 6 to 9 hours per week of dedicated revision over the final six weeks. For a student with significant gaps, increase to 10-12 hours, while keeping at least one full day off. More than that becomes counterproductive.
Can my child balance revision with CEGEP program decisions?
Yes, but they’re two separate things. CEGEP admissions for fall 2026 were already filed in March. What matters now is finishing the year with the best possible grades for the cote R. Don’t let your teen get distracted by program choices they’ve already made.
Can a tutor really help with French writing?
Yes, especially if your child is solid on comprehension but weak on structure. A tutor can walk through the Ministry’s grading rubric line by line — that’s what wins points. In 4 or 5 targeted sessions on argumentative text writing, students often pick up 5 to 10 points on the exam.
What if my child fails the French writing exam?
First, calculate the final grade with the school portion (50% school + 50% exam). If the final grade falls below 60%, that’s a failure in French — which delays graduation. A retake is available in the July session (the writing exam retake is on July 27, 2026, in the morning). It’s not ideal, but it’s recoverable. Talk to the school administration about retake registration.
In Secondary 5 math, which sequence is hardest?
Math SN is the most demanding in conceptual depth. Math TS requires significant rigour in solving applied problems. Math CST is more accessible but doesn’t open the same CEGEP programs (engineering, pure sciences). “Difficulty” depends on the student — someone who likes abstraction prefers SN, someone who prefers concrete applications prefers TS.
Secondary 5 is the year ministry exam preparation has the biggest long-term impact. The June 8 French writing exam and the June 18 math exam shape the cote R, which shapes CEGEP admission outcomes. With structured revision starting now, your child stacks the odds in their favour. If one subject in particular has them stuck, a few targeted sessions with a tutor can be the difference between an average grade and a competitive cote R.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is the Secondary 5 French ministry exam in 2026?
The Secondary 5 French writing exam (épreuve unique d'écriture) takes place on Monday, June 8, 2026, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Students have 3 hours and 15 minutes to write an argumentative text based on a preparatory dossier of texts they receive in class a few days before the exam.
How much does the French writing exam count toward the final grade?
The épreuve unique d'écriture in Secondary 5 French counts for 50% of the final grade in French language of instruction. The other 50% comes from the teacher's evaluation throughout the year. The final French grade flows directly into the cote R calculation used for CEGEP admissions — meaning this exam has the largest long-term impact of any ministry exam.
Is there a math ministry exam in Secondary 5?
Only for students who continue with mathematics in Secondary 5 (Math CST 5, TS 5, or SN 5) — typically those who need math as a prerequisite for their target CEGEP program. The Secondary 5 math ministry exam is on June 18, 2026. Students who stopped taking math after Secondary 4 do not have a Secondary 5 math ministry exam.
Does my child have to take the Secondary 5 English Second Language exam?
Yes. All Secondary 5 students in the French school system take the English Second Language ministry exam, in either the regular or enriched version depending on their program. The exact date varies by school service centre but typically falls between late May and early June 2026. The exam includes reading comprehension, oral interaction, and (for the enriched program) a written production component.
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